jLIBRilRY OF CONGRESS.? 



# 



% I- /S7^ J 

I UNITED STATES OP AMERICA. \ 



POEMS. 



POEMS. 



BY 



MRS. JULIA C&^R.>^ORR, 

AUTHOR OP "sibyl HUNTINGTON," ETC. 





PHILADELPHIA: 

J. B. LIPPINCOTT & CO. 
1872. 



\ 






Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1871, by 
J. B. LIPPINCOTT & CO., 

In the Office of the Librarian of Consrress at Washington. 



DEDICATORY. 

Because, O best beloved, thou hast been 
So much to me these many, many years ; 

The charmed circle of thy love within 

Holding me safe from woman's bitterest tears; 

Because thy strength, in many an hour of need, 
Has been my sure support, my constant stay, — • 

No sword to wound me, and no broken reed. 
But a strong tower to shelter me alway; 

Because thy heart still answers to my own. 
Though young Romance we buried long ago. 

What time Life's burdens were upon us thrown. 
And its June roses lost their crimson glow ; 

Because, — but, ah ! I do not need to tell 
Why at thy feet I drop these humble lays ; 

For in thy heart of hearts thou knowest well 
Whose love makes beautiful my summer days ! 



(V) 



CONTENTS. 



PACK 

Proem II 

The Dead Century 13 

Over the Wall 22 

A Few Words 24 

Vashti's Scroll 25 

Elsie's Child 34 

Without and Within 41 

Hereafter 43 

Maud and Madge 45 

The Bell of St. Paul's 47 

Lenora 49 

Hymn to Life , 50 

A Dead Love 52 

Faith 54 

Hymn — (For the Opening of a Reform School) 54 

Margery Grey 56 

My Friends 62 

The Pine-Trees 65 

November 67 

Hilda, Spinning 68 

Outgrown 71 



A Picture , 



74 



The Pilgrim 76 

A Mother's Answer 77 

The Dream-Land Grave 78 

For a Silver Wedding 79 

" Earth to Earth" 81 

At the Gate 83 

The Cherry-Tree 84 

( vii ) 



viii CONTENTS. 

PAGE 

What my Friend said to Me 87 

Three White Mice 87 

Questionings 89 

Hymn. — No. i — (For the Dedication of a Cemetery) 90 

Hymn. — No. 2 — (For the Dedication of a Cemetery) 91 

Night and Morning 92 

Maturity 95 

Peace 97 

Yesterday and To-Day 98 

De Profundis 100 

In the Garden loi 

The Humming-Bird 103 

A Song for Two 104 

Once ! 105 

What I Lost 107 

The Chimney Swallow 108 

Catharine no 

Heirship in 

Agnes 113 

My Mocking-Bird 115 

Under the Palm-Trees 117 

Hymn — (For an Installation) 118 

Weariness 120 

Ode — (For the Dedication of a Music-Hail) 121 

" Lord, save or I perish" 122 

Never Again 123 

The Name 125 

Life 126 

Christmas, 1863 126 

Centennial Poem 127 

The Three Ships 137 

The Ghost 140 

" Into Thy Hands" 141 

December 26, 1910 142 

From Baton Rouge 146 

The Vermont VcJlunteers 148 

May 6, 1864 152 

Drifted Apart 1^4 

The Drummer Boy's Burial 155 

Charley of Malvern Hill 159 

Supplicamus 161 



CONTENTS. ix 

PAGE 

The Last of Six 163 

A Memory 167 

Our Flags at the Capitol 168 

1865 170 

Waiting for Letters 172 

Idle Words 173 

Incompleteness 174 



Coming Home 179 

Hidden Away 181 

Wakening Early 182 

Nellie's Mother 183 

So Long 185 

Blest 186 

Four Years 187 

Then and Now 188 

Remembrance i8g 

A Vision 190 



PROEM. 

No words of wondrous power are mine, 
No spells to charm the listening throng; 

I do not hope to join the ranks 

Of those who breathe immortal song. 

Nor would I, with irreverent tread, 
Approach the altars where they stand. 

The mighty masters, laurel-crowned. 
Each with the palm-branch in his hand. 

Ah ! rather would I veil my face, 
And kneel afar in humblest awe; 

As he who, trembling and afraid, 
The glory of Mount Sinai saw. 

But not the eagle, only, soars 

From its lone eyrie to the sun ; 
The lark springs from its grassy nest. 

And sings, ere day has well begun. 

And not the Pole star, only, burns 

Through the long watches of the night; 

Yon tiny spark, far off and dim, 
Sends meekly forth its little light. 

(") 



PROEM. 

And not the Queen Rose, only, lends 
Its rich breath to the summer air; 

Ten thousand small, sweet censers swing 
In field and woodland everywhere. 

And not before the All-Father's throne 

Do seraph voices, only, rise; 
The babe that died an hour ago 

Now joins the anthem of the skies. 

And though I may not hope to clothe 
Profoundest thought in stately rhyme, 

Nor breathe the burning words that pass 
From age to age, from clime to clime : 

Yet God and Nature bid me sing, 
Albeit my notes are faint and few; 

I dare not question nor refuse, 

But humbly strive their will to do. 

And it may be my simple songs 

May reach some weary, world-worn ear, 
And soothe some heart that could not bear 

A louder, loftier strain to hear. 



THE DEAD CENTURY. 
1770-1870. 

Lo ! we come 
Bearing the Century, cold and dumb ! 
Folded above the mighty breast 
Lie the hands that have earned their rest ; 
Hushed are the grandly-speaking lips; 
Closed are the eyes in drear eclipse ; 
And the sculptured limbs are deathly still, 
Responding not to the eager will, 

As we come 
Bearing the Century, cold and dumb ! 



Lo ! we wait ' 

Knocking here at the sepulchre's gate ! 
Souls of the ages passed away, 
A mightier joins your ranks to-day ; 
Open your doors and give him room. 
Buried Centuries, in your tomb ! 
For calmly under this heavy pall 
Sleepeth the kingliest of ye all, 

While we wait 
At the sepulchre's awful gate ! 

III. 
Yet — pause here 
Bending low o'er the narrow bier ! 

(13) 



14 



rilE DEAD CENTURY. 

Pause ye awhile and let your thought 
Compass the work that he hath wrought ; 
Look on his brow so scarred and worn ; 
Think of the weight his hands have borne; 
Think of the fetters he hath broken, 
Of the mighty words his lips have spoken 

Who lies here 
Dead and cold on a narrow bier ! 



Ere he goes 
Silent and calm to his grand repose, — 
While the Centuries in their tomb 
Crowd together to give him room, 
Let us think of the wondrous deeds 
Answering still to the world's great needs. 
Answering still to the world's wild prayer, 
He hath been first to do and dare ! 

Ah ! he goes 
Crowned with bays to his last repose. 



V. 

When the earth 
Sang for joy to hail his birth, 
Over the hilltops, faint and far, 
Glimmered the light of Freedom's star. 
Only a poor, pale torch it seemed — 
Dimly from out the clouds it gleamed — 
Oft to the watcher's eye 'twas lost 
Like a flame by fierce winds rudely tossed. 

Scarce could earth 
Catch one ray when she hailed his birth ! 



THE DEAD CENTURY. 

VI. 

But ere long 
His young voice, likea clarion strong, 
Rang through the wilderness far and free, 
Proi)liet and herald of Good to be ! 
Then with a shout the stalwart men 
Answered proudly from mount and glen, 
Till in the brave, new, western world 
Freedom's banners were wide unfurled ! 

And ere long 
The Century's voice, like a clarion strong, 



Cried, "O Earth, 
Pagans sing for a Nation's birth ! 
Shout hosannas, ye golden stars. 
Peering through yonder cloudy bars ! 
Burn, O Sun, with a clearer beam ! 
Shine, O Moon, with a softer gleam ! 
Join, ye winds, in the choral strain ! 
Swell, rolling seas, the glad refrain. 

While the Earth 
Pagans sings for a Nation's birth !" 



Ah ! he saw — 
This young prophet with solemn awe — 
How after weary pain and sin, 
Strivings without and foes within. 
Fruitless prayings and long suspense, 
And toil that bore no recompense, — 
After peril and blood and tears, 
Honor and Peace should crown the vears ! 



15 



1 6 THE DEAD CENTURY. 

This he saw 
While his heart thrilled with solemn awe. 



His clear eyes 
Gazing forward in glad surprise, 
Saw how our land at last should be 
Truly the home of the brave and free ! — 
Saw from the old world's crowded streets, 
Pestilent cities and close retreats, 
Forms gaunt and pallid with famine sore 
Flee in hot haste to our happy shore, 

Their sad eyes 
Widening ever in new surprise. 



From all lands 
Thronging they come in eager bands ; 
Each with the tongue his mother spoke ; 
Each with the songs her voice awoke ; 
Each with his dominant hopes and needs, 
Alien habits and varying creeds. 
Bringing strange fictions and fancies they came. 
Calling old truths by a different name, 

When the lands 
Sent their sons hither in thronging bands. 

XI. 

But the Seer — 
This dead Century lying here — 
Rising out of this chaos, saw 
Peace and Order and Love and Law ! 
Saw by what subtle alchemy 



THE DEAD CENTURY. 

Basest of metals at length should be 
Transmuted into the shining gold, 
Meet for a king to have and hold. 

Ah ! great Seer ! 
I'his pale Century lying here ! 



So he taught 
Honest freedom of speech and thought ; 
Taught that Truth is the grandest thing 
Painter can paint, or poet sing; 
Taught that under the meanest guise 
It marches to deeds of high emprise ; 
Treading the paths the prophets trod 
Up to the very mount of God ! 

Truth, he taught, 
Claims full freedom of speech and thought. 

XIII. 

Bearing long 
Heavy burdens of hate and wrong. 
Still has the arm of the Century been 
Waging war against crime and sin. 
Still has he plead Humanity's cause; 
Still has he prayed for equal laws ; 
Still has he taught that the human race 
Is one in des})ite of hue or place, 

Even though long 
It has wrestled with hate and wrong. 

XIV. 

And at length — 
A giant arising in his strengtli — 



17 



1 8 THE DEAD CENTURY. 

The fetters of serf and slave he broke, 
Sniiting them off by a single stroke ! 
Over the Muscovite's waste of snows, 
Up from the fields where the cotton grows. 
Clearly the shout of deliverance rang, 
When chattel and serf to manhood sprang, 

As at length 
The giant rose up in resistless strength. 



XV. 

Far apart — 
Each alone like a lonely heart — 
Sat the Nations, until his hand 
Wove about them a wondrous band ; 
Wrought about them a mighty chain 
Binding the mountains to the main ! 
Distance and time rose dark between 
Islands and continents still unseen. 

While apart 
None felt the throb of another's heart. 

XVI. 

But to-day 
Time and space hath he swept away ! 
Side by side do the Nations sit 
By ties of brotherhood closer knit ;— 
Whispers float o'er the rolling deep; 
Voices echo from steep to steep ; — 
Nations speak, and the quick replies 
Fill the earth and the vaulted skies ; 

For to-day 
Time and distance are swept away. 



THE DEAD CENTURY. 



If strange thrills 
Quicken Rome on her seven hills ; 
If afar on her sultry throne 
India wails and makes her moan ; 
If the eagles of haughty France 
Fall as the Prussian hosts advance, 
All the continents, all the lands, 
Feel the shock through their clasped hands, 

And quick thrills 
Stir the remotest vales and hills. 



XVIII. 

Yet these eyes. 
Dark on whose lids Death's shadow lies. 
Let their far-reaching vision rest 
Not alone on the mountain's crest ; 
Nor did these feet with stately tread 
Follow alone where the Nations led ; 
Nor these pale hands, so weary-worn. 
Minister only where States were born. 

These clear eyes, 
Soft on whose lids Death's slumber lies, 

XIX. 

Turned their gaze 
Earnest and pitiful, on the ways 
Where the poor, burdened sons of toil 
Earned their bread amid dust and moil. 
Saw the dim attics where, day by day, 
Women were stitching their lives away. 



19 



20 



THE DEAD CENTURY. 

Bending low o'er the slender steel 
Till heart and brain began to reel, 

And their days 
Stretched on and on in a dreary maze. 

XX. 

Then he spoke; 
Lo ! at once into being woke 
Muscles of iron, arms of steel. 
Nerves that never a thrill could feel ! 
Wheels and pulleys and whirling bands 
Did the work of the weary hands, 
And tireless feet moved to and fro 
Where the aching limbs were wont to go. 

When he spoke 
And all his sprites into being woke. 

XXI. 

Do you say 
He was no saint who has passed away ? 
Saint or sinner, he did brave deeds 
Answering still to Humanity's needs ! 
Songs he hath sung that shall live for aye ; 
Words he hath uttered that ne'er shall die ; 
Richer the world than when the earth 
Sang for joy to hail his birth, 

Even though you say 
He was no saint whom we sing to-day. 

XXII. 

Lo ! we come 
Bearing the Century, cold and dumb ! 



THE DEAD CENTURY. 

Folded above the mighty breast 
Lie the hands that have earned their rest ; 
Hushed are the grandly-speaking lips ; 
Closed are the eyes in drear eclipse ; 
And the sculptured limbs are deathly still, 
Responding not to the eager will, 

As we come 
Bearing the Century, cold and dumb ! 

XXIII. 

Lo ! we wait 
Knocking here at the sepulchre's gate ! 
Souls of the Ages passed away, 
A mightier joins your ranks to-day ; 
Open your doors, ye royal dead, 
And welcome give to this crowned head ! 
For calmly under this sable pall 
Sleepeth the kingliest of ye all, 

While we wait 
At the sepulchre's awful gate ! 

XXIV. 

Give him room 
Proudly, Centuries ! in your tomb. 
Now that his weary work is done 
Honor and rest he well hath won. 
Let him who is first among you pay 
Homage to him who comes this day, 
Bidding him pass to his destined place, 
Noblest of all his noble race ! 

Make ye room 
For the kingly dead in the silent tomb ! 



OVER THE WALL. 



OVER THE WALL. 

I KNOW a spot where the wild vines creep, 

And the coral moss-cups grow, 
And where, at the foot of the rocky steep. 

The sweet blue violets blow. 
There all day long, in the summer-time, 
You may hear the river's dreamy rhyme; 
There all day long does the honey-bee 
Murmur and hum in the hollow tree. 

And there the feathery hemlock makes 

A shadow cool and sweet, 
While from its emerald wing it shakes 

Rare incense at your feet. 
There do the silvery lichens cling. 
There does the tremulous harebell swing; 
And many a scarlet berry shines 
Deep in the green of the tangled vines. 

Over the wall at dawn of day. 

Over the wall at noon, 
Over the wall when the shadows say 

That night is coming soon, 
A little maiden with laughing eyes 
Climbs in her eager haste, and hies 
Down to the spot where the wild vines creep. 
And violets bloom by the rocky steep. 



OVER THE WALL. 23 

All wild things love her. The murmuring bee 

Scarce stirs when she draws near, 
And sings the bird in the hemiock-tree 

Its sweetest for her ear. 
The harebells nod as she passes by, 
The violet lifts its calm blue eye, 
The ferns bend lowly her steps to greet, 
And the mosses creep to her dancing feet. 

Up in her pathway seems to spring 

All that is sweet or rare, — 
Chrysalis quaint, or the moth's bright wing, 

Or flower-buds strangely fair. 
She watches the tiniest bird's-nest hid 
The thickly clustering leaves amid j 
And the small brown tree-toad on her arm 
Quietly hojDs, and fears no harm. 

Ah, child of the laughing eyes, and heart 

Attuned to Nature's voice ! 
Thou hast found a bliss that will ne'er dejjart 

While earth can say, "Rejoice!" 
The years must come, and the years must go ; 
But the flowers will bj^om, and the breezes blew. 
And bird and butterfly, moth and bee. 
Bring on their swift wings joy to thee ! ' 



24 A PEW WORDS. 



A FEW WORDS. 

Oh, faithful friend of other days ! 

My grateful heart would speak to thee j 
Turn from thy far-off busy ways, 

And listen as of old to me. 

I fain would speak, yet know not how: 

A gulf, impassable as death, 
Lies, broad and deep, between us now — 

Thou canst not hear my feeble breath ! 

But once within the silent void 

I'll drop a blossom, fair and sweet; 

From out the darkness unalloyed 
Some power may bear it to thy feet. 

Its name is Gratitude. Thy heart 
Will tell thee in what soil it grew; 

What influence bade the flower-bud start, 
Watered by tears, instead of dew. 

Could I but give it voice, O friend, 
And bid it for my sealed lips speak ! 

But ah ! even then I could not send 

Thee half my thought, for words are weak; 

Too weak to tell thee how I keep 
Thy memory in my inmost heart 

Not a pale corse that lies asleep. 

But throned and crowned, of life a part. 



VASIiri'S SCROLL. 

I write no word, I sing no song, 

That does not bring thee back to me; 

Oh, thou whose wisdom made me strong, 
How much I owe to God and thee ! 

And as the swift-winged years fly past, 
Methinks I miss thee more and more; 

Be patient, oh, my heart ! At last 
We'll meet upon the farther shore. 

Farewell ! My lot is deeply blest ; 

May thine be just as bright, I pray; 
May kind Earth give thee of her best, 

And Heaven be near to thee alway ! 



25 



VASHTI'S SCROLL. 

Dethroned and crownless, I so late a queen ! 
Forsaken, poor and lonely, I who wore 
The crown of Persia with such stately grace ! 
But yesterday a royal Avife; but now 
From my estate cast down, and fallen so low 
That beggars scoff at me ! Men toss my name 
Backward and forward on their mocking tongues. 
In all the king's broad realm there is not one 
To do poor Vashti homage. Even the dog 
My hand had fondled, in the palace walls 
Fawns on my rival. When I left the court, 
Weeping and sore distressed, he followed me, 
Licking my fingers, leaping in my face, 
And frisking round me till I reached the gates. 
Then with long pauses, as of one perplexed, 

3 



26 VASHTPS SCROLL. 

And frequent lockings backward, and low whines 

Of puzzled wonder, — that had made me smile 

If I had been less lorn,— with drooping ears, 

Dropt eyes, and downcast forehead he went back, 

Leaving me desolate. So went they all 

Who, when Ahasuerus on my brow 

Set his own royal crown and called me queen. 

Made the air ring with plaudits! Loud they cried, 

"Long live Queen Vashti, Persia's fairest Rose, 

Mother of Princes, and the nation's Hope!" 

The rose is withered now; the queen is dead. 

To these poor breasts no princely boy shall cling, 

And I shall hold no ciarling on my knee, 

To love as son and reverence as king ! 

A poor, dishonored thing ! Yet on this scroll 

I will rehearse the story of my woes; 

And when I die, held closely to my heart, 

Or clasped in stiffened fingers, it shall go 

To the tomb with me. Then perchance some one, 

In the far future years of which they tell. 

Shall find the yellow parchment, and with eyes 

Wet with sad tears, shall read my cruel fate. 



O ! thou unknown, unborn, who through the gloom 

And mists of ages in my vaulted tomb 

Shalt find this parchment, and with reverent care 

Shalt bear it outward to the sun and air: 

O ! thou whose patient fingers shall unroll 

With slow, persuasive touch this little scroll, — 

O, loving, tender eyes that, like twin stars, 

I seem to see through yonder cloudy bars, — 

Read Vashti' s story, and I pray ye tell 

The whole wide world if she did ill or well ! 



VASHTPS SCROLL. 27 

Ahasiierus reigned. On Persia's throne, 

Lord of a miglUy realm, he sat alone. 

And stretched his sceptre from the farthest slope 

Of India's hills, to where the Ethiop 

Dwelt in barbaric splendor. Kinglier king 

Never did poet praise or minstrel sing ! 

He had no peers. Among his lords he shone 

As shines a planet, single and alone; 

And I, alas! I loved him! Crowned queen, 

Clasping the sceptre my small hands between, 

I might have reigned, yet kept a heart as free 

As this light breeze that sweeps the Persian sea! 

But, ah ! I loved my king— the kingly man 

Forth at whose call my glad heart quickly ran 

Owning its lord and master. Oh ! we two 

Such bliss as peasant lovers joy in, knew! 

No lowly home in all our wide domain 

Held more of peace than ours, or less of pain. 

But one dark day— O, woeful day of days ! 

Whose hours I number now in sad amaze. 

Thou hadst no prophet of the ills to be, 

Nor sign nor omen came to succor me ! — 

That day Ahasuerus smiled and said, 

" Since first I wore this crown upon my head 

llirice have the emerald clusters of the vine 

Changed to translucent globes of ruby wine; 

And thrice the peaches on the loaded walls 

Have slowly rounded into wondrous balls 

Of gold and crimson. I will make a feast. 

Princes and lords, the greatest and the least. 

All Persia and all Media, shall see 

The pomp and splendor that encompass me. 

The riches of my kingdom shall be shown, 

And all my glorious majesty made known 



28 VASHTFS SCROLL. 

Where'er the shadow of my sceptred hand 
Sways a great people with its mute command!" 
Then came from far and near a hurrying throng 
Of skilled and cunning workmen. All day long 
And far into the silent night, they wrought 
Most quaint and beautiful devices — still 
Responsive to their master's eager will, 
And giving form to his creative thought — • 
Till Shushan grew a marvel ! 

Never yet 
Yon rolling sun on fairer scene has set : 
The palace windows were ablaze with light ; 
And Persia's lords were there, most richly dight 
In broidered silks, or costliest cloth of gold, 
That kept the sunshine in each lustrous fold, 
Or softly flowing tissues, pure and white 
As fleecy clouds at noonday. Clear and bright 
Shone tlie pure gold of Ophir, and the gleam 
Of burning gems, that mocked the pallid beam 
Of the dim, wondering stars, made radiance there. 
Radiance undreamed of, and beyond compare ! 
Up from the gardens floated the perfume 
Of rose and myrtle, in their perfect bloom; 
The red pomegranate cleft its heart in twain. 
Pouring its life blood in a crimson rain; 
The slight acacia waved its yellow plumes. 
And afar off amid the starlit glooms 
Were sweet recesses, where the orange bowers 
Dropt their pure blossoms down in snowy showers. 
And night reigned undisturbed. 

From cups of gold 
Diverse one from another, meet to hold 
The king's most costly wines, or to be raise 
To princely lips, the gay guests drank, and praised 



VASHTPS SCROLL. 29 

Their rich abundance. Softest music swept 
Through the vast arches, till men smiled and wept 
For very joy. Then slowly keeping time 
To the gay cymbal's clearly ringing chime, 
Stole down the long arcades the dancing-girls; 
Some with dark, braided tresses, some with curls 
Like golden sunbeams, floating unconfined 
Save by the wreaths amid their brightness twined. 
And softly rounded limbs, that rose and fell 
To the voluptuous music's dreamy swell, 
So full of subtle power, it seemed to be 
The voice of passion and of mystery ! 

Wild waxed the revel. On an ivory throne 
Inlaid with ebony and gems that shone 
With a surpassing lustre, sat my lord, 
The King Ahai?lierus. His great sword, 
Blazing with diamonds on hilt and blade, — 
The mighty sword that made his foes afraid, — 
And the proud sceptre he was wont to grasp, 
^^'ith all the monarch in his kingly clasp. 
Against the crouching lions (guard that kept 
On either side the throne and never slept), 
Leaned carelessly. And flowing downward o'er 
The ivory steps even to the marble floor, 
Swept the rich royal robes in many a fold 
Of Tyrian purple flecked with purest gold. 
The heavy crown his head refused to wear. 
More fitly crowned by its own clustering hair, 
Lay on a pearl-wrought cushion by his side, 
Mute symbol of great Persia's power and pride ; 
While on his brow some courtier's hand had placed 
The fairest chajjlet monarch ever graced, 
3* 



3° 



VASHTFS SCROLL. 



A wreath of dewy roses, fresh and sweet, 

Just brought from out the garden's cool retreat. 

Louder and louder grew the sounds of mirth ; 
Faster and faster flowed the red Avine forth ; 
In high, exulting strains the minstrels sang 
The monarch's glory, till the great roof rang; 
And flushed at length with pride and song and wine, 
The king rose up and said, " O nobles mine ! 
Princes of Persia, Media's hope and pride, 
Stars of my kingdom, will ye aught beside ? 
Speak ! and I swear your sovereign's will shall be 
On this fair night to please and honor ye !" 
Then rose a shout from out the glittering throng 
Drowning the voice of merriment and song. 
Humming and murmuring like a hive of bees — 
What would they more each charmed sense to please ? 

Out spoke at last a tongue that should have been 
Palsied in foul dishonor there anei then. 
" O great Ahasuerus ! ne'er before 
Reigned such a king so blest a people o'er ! 
What shall we ask? What great and wondrous boon 
To crown the hours that fly away too soon ? 
There is but one. 'Tis said that mortal eyes 
Never yet gazed, in strange yet sweet surprise, 
Upon a face like that of her who wears 
Thy signet-ring, and all thy glory shares, — 
Our fair Queen Vashti, she who yet shall be 
Mother of him who reigneth after thee ! 
Show us her royal beauty ! Naught beside 
Can fill our cup of happiness and pride." 
A murmur ran throughout the startled crowd. 
Swelling at last to plaudits long and loud. 



VASHTPS SCROLL. 

Maddened with wine, they knew not what they said. 

Ahasuerus bent liis haughty head, 

And for an instant o'er his face there swept 

A look his courtiers in their memory kept 

For many a day — a look of doubt and pain, 

They scarcely caught ere it had passed again. 

" My kingly word is pledged." Then to the seven 

Lord chamberlains to whom the keys were given : 

" Haste ye, and to this noble presence bring 

Vashti, the Queen, with royal crown and ring; 

And let the people see the matchless charms 

That Heaven has sent to bless my kingly arms." 

They did their errand, those old, gray-haired men. 

Who should have braved the lion in his den. 

Or ere they bore such message to their queen. 

Or took such words their aged lips between. 

What ! I, the daughter of a kingly race. 

Step down, unblushing, from my lofty place, 

And, like a common dancing-girl, who wears 

Her beauty unconcealed, and, shameless, bares 

Her brow to every gazer, boldly go 

Before those men my unveiled face to show ? 

I — who had kept my beauty pure and bright 

Only because 'twas precious in his sight. 

Guarding it ever as a holy thing. 

Sacred to him, my lover, lord, and king, — 

Could I reveal it to the curious eyes 

Of the mad rabble that with drunken cries 

Were shouting " Vashti ! Vashti !" — Sooner far, 

Beyond the rays of sun, or moon, or star, 

I would have buried it in endless night ! 

Pale and dismayed, in wonder and affright, 

My maidens hung around me as I told 

Those seven lord chamberlains, so gray and old, 



32 



VASHTI'S SCROLL. 

To bear this answer back : "It may not be. 

My lord, my king, I cannot come to thee. 

It is not meet that Persia's queen, like one 

Who treads the market-place from sun to sun, 

Should bare her beauty to the hungry crowd, 

Who name her name in accents hoarse and loud." 

With stern, cold looks they left me. Ah ! I knew 

If my dear lord to his best self were true, 

That he would hold me guiltless, and would say, 

" I thank thee, love, that thou didst not obey!" 

But the red wine was ruling o'er his brain ; 

The cruel wine that recked not of my pain. 

Up from the angry throng a clamor rose ; 

The flattering sycophants were now my foes; 

And evil counsellors about the throne. 

Hiding the jealous joy they dared not own. 

With slow, wise words, and many a virtuous frown. 

Said, " Be the queen from her estate cast down ! 

Let her not see the king's face evermore, 

Nor come within his presence as of yore ; 

So disobedient wives through all the land 

Shall read the lesson, heed and understand." 

Up spoke another, eager to be heard, 

In royal councils fain to have a word, 

" Let this commandment of the king be writ, 

In the law of the Medes and Persians, as is fit, — 

The perfect law that man may alter not 

Nor of its bitter end abate one jot." 

Alas ! the king was wroth. Before his face 

I could not go to plead my piteous case ; 

But, pitiless, with scarce dissembled sneers, 

And poisoned words that rankled in his ears. 

My wily foes, afraid to let him pause. 

Brought the great book that held the Persian laws, 



VASHTFS SCROLL. 

And ere the rising of the morrow's sun, 

My bitter doom was sealed, the deed was done. 

Scarce had two moons passed when one dreary night 

I sat within my bower in woeful plight, 

Weary and heartsick, as one well might be 

Who trod the wine-press all alone, like me, 

When suddenly upon my presence stole 

A muffled form, whose shadow stirred my soul 

I knew not wherefore. Ere my tongue could speak, 

Or with a cry the brooding silence break, 

A low voice murmured, " Vashti !" With a bound 

Of half-delirious joy, upon the ground 

At the king's feet I fell. Oh ! scorn me not. 

If for one moment, all my wrongs forgot, 

I only saw the sun that gave me light. 

Breaking once more the darkness of my night ! 

It was but for a moment. Pale and still. 

Hushing my heart's cry with an iron will, 

"What will the king?" I asked. No answer came. 

But to his sad eyes leaped a sudden flame ; 

With clasping arms he raised me to his breast 

And on my brow and lips such kisses pressed 

As man may give his dead — long, sad, and slow, 

Blent with great, shuddering sighs, the overflow 

Of pent-up agony and direst need ! 

Breathless, ere long, and trembling like a reed, 

I crept from out his bosom. It could be 

Ah ! nevermore a fitting place for me ! 

But when I saw the anguish in his eyes, 

My tortured love burst forth in tears and cries. 

How could I live, and bear my bitter doom, 

Thrust from the heart that should have been my ^ 



33 



34 



ELSIE'S CHILD. 

Then were his lips unsealed. I cannot tell 
All the wild words that I remember well. 
Oh ! was it joy or was it pain to know 
That not alone I wept my weary woe ? 
Alas ! I know not. But I know to-day — 
If this be sin, forgive me, Heaven, I pray ! — 
That though his eyes have never looked on mine 
Since that sad night in bower of eglantine. 
And fair Queen Esther sits, a beauteous bride, 
In stately Shushan at the monarch's side, 
The king remembers Vashti, even yet 
Breathing her name sometimes with vain regret, 
Or murmuring, haply, in a whisper low, 
* ' Woe for the heart that loved me long ago ! ' ' 



ELSIE'S CHILD. 



A LEGEND OF SWITZERLAND. 



"Come and sit beside me, Elsie, — put your little wheel 
away, — 

Have you quite forgotten, darling wife, this is our wed- 
ding-day?" 

Elsie turned her bright face towards him, fairer now than 

when a bride ; 
But she did not cease her spinning while to Ulric she 

replied : 



ELSIE'S CHILD. 



35 



*' No, I have not quite forgotten; all day long my happy 

brain 
Has been living o'er the moments of that blessed day 



"I will come and sit beside you when the twilight shadows 

fall; 
Vou shall sing me some old love-song, while the darkness 

covers all. 

**But while golden sunbeams linger in the vale and on the 

hill, 
Ask me not to bid the music of my merry wheel be 

still." 

"If its humdrum notes are sweeter than thy husband's 

voice to thee. 
Mind thy spinning, Madam Elsie, — do not come to sit 

with me!" 

"Don't be angry with me, Ulric; see, the sun is almost 

down. 
And its last red rays are gilding the far steeples of the 

town. 

"I will come to you directly, and will kiss that frown 
away, — 

You must not be angry, Ulric, for this is our wedding- 
day." 

"If it were not, I should care not that you will not come 
to me; 

But this evening! prythee, Elsie, let that tiresome spin- 
ning be!" 



36 



ELSIE'S CHILD. 



"Why, to-morrow is the fair-day, do you not remember, 

dear? 
I must spin a little longer; 'tis the last skein I have 

here. 

"On the wall are others hanging, very fine and soft are 

they, 
And for them old Father Maurice will his money gladly 

pay." 

"You can buy a silken bodice, and a ribbon for your 

hair, 
Or a hooded crimson mantle, — they will make you very 

fair! 

"Or a necklace sparkling grandly, or a kerchief bright 

and gay, — 
Yonder Henri drives the cows home, I will join him on 

the way." 

"Oh, no, Ulric, do not leave me!" cried she, springing 

to his side, 
"I have done my weary spinning, and the last knot I 

have tied. 

"Come with me, within the cottage, where our Hugo lies 

asleep, 
Never saw you rest as placid as his slumber soft and 

deep. 

' ' How the flaxen ringlets cluster round his forehead broad 

and white ! 
Saw you ever, dearest Ulric, half so beautiful a sight ? 



ELSIE'S CHILD. 



37 



"Now, if you will smile upon me, just as you were wont 

to do, 
"\^'hile we sit here in the moonlight, I'll a secret tell to 

you. 

"I shall buy no silken bodice, and no necklace grand 

and gay; 
I'm a wife and mother, darling, and I've put such things 

away. 

"But a coat for little Hugo — of bright scarlet it shall be, 
Trimmed with braid, and shining buttons, and the richest 
broiderie. 

"Lady Alice, at the castle, soon will give her birthday 

fete, 
And last night I chanced to meet her, as I passed the 

western gate. 

"She was walking with her maidens, but she bent her 

stately head, 
Kissed our little Hugo's forehead, as she sweetly smiled, 

and said : 

"'Bring him to the castle, Elsie, lovelier boy was never 

seen, — 
Bring him with you, on my fete-day, to the dance upon 

the green.' 

"So, to-morrow, dearest Ulric, you must surely go with 

mc. 
And I'll buy, for little Hugo, just the j^rettiest coat I 

see ! " 

4 



38 



ELSIE'S CHILD. 



"There, my Hugo, you are ready, run out now before 

the door, 
And I'll come to join my little one, in just five minutes 

more. 

"How the scarlet coat becomes him! Ulric, do but see 

him now, 
As he shakes his head, and tosses back the light curls 

from his brow." 

"What a vain young mother, Elsie! from the window 
come away, 

You'll have time enough to glory in your pretty pet to- 
day. 

"Bind up now your own bright tresses; here are roses 

sweet and rare. 

With the dew still lingering on them, — you must put 

them in your hair. 

' ' You must wear the scarf I gave you, and the bracelets, — 

and I ween 
That my Elsie '11 be the fairest one that dances on the 

green." 

"Which is now the vainest, Ulric, tell me, is it you or I? 
I'll be ready in a minute; look if you can Hugo spy. 

"It may be that he will wander where the purple berries 

grow ; 
For the world I would not have him, they will stain his 

new coat so." 



ELSIE'S CHILD. 



39 



"Elsie ! Elsie !" In a moment rose and scarf were dashed 

aside, 
And she stood within the doorway, — ''Where is Hugo?" 

then she cried. 

"I have traced his little footsteps Avhere the purple ber- 
■*• ries shine, 

But I can see nothing of him; do not tremble, Elsie 
mine. 

"Very likely he has wandered towards the castle; for he 

knew — 
Little wise one! — we were going, and that he was going 

too. 

' "We will find him very quickly, — he cannot have strayed 
away ; 
It is not five minutes, darling, since you bade him go and 
play." 

All day long they sought for Hugo, — sought him utterly 

in vain, — 
Sought him midst the rocks and glaciers, and beneath , 

them, on the plain. 

From the castle Lady Alice sent her servants far and 

wide ; 
Mirth was lost in bitter mourning, and the voice of music 

died. 

Through the day the air resounded with the little lost 

one's name. 
And at night, with myriad torches, hills and woods were 

all aflame. 



40 



ELSIE'S CHILD. 



But they found not pretty Hugo; where the purple ber- 
ries grew, 

They could see his tiny footsteps, — but they nothing fur- 
ther knew. 

III. 
"Henri! Henri! don't be gazing at the eagle's nest all 

day; 
Long ago you should have started forth, to drive the cows 

away. ' ' 

"But come here one moment, mother, just one moment; 
can you see 

Naught that flutters like a banner when the wind is blow- 
ing free?" 

"Oh, my eyes are dim and aged," was the withered 

crone's reply ; 
"You must look yourself, good Henri, for I nothing can 

espy. ' ' 

"Then do you come here, Enrica; does my sight deceive 

me so? 
You can see it, I am certain, when the wind begins to 

blow." 

But Enrica' s cheek grew pallid, and she turned her eyes 

away, 
Crying, "Elsie, my poor Elsie !" It was all that she could 
say. 

For within that lofty eyrie, on the mountain's craggy 

height, 
Hung the coat of little Hugo, gleaming in the morning 

light. 



WITHOUT AND WITHIN. 



41 



\\\\.\\ its hue of brilliant scarlet, just as bright as bright 

could be, 
With its gayly shining buttons, and its rich embroiderie ! 

Months and years rolled slowly onward, — Elsie's sunny 

hair turned gray. 
And the eagles left the eyrie to its desolate decay. 

But, alas! whene'er the sun ghone, and the wind was 

blowing free, 
Something fluttered like a banner, which no eye could 

bear to see ! 



WITHOUT AND WITHIN. 

SoF'iLY the gold has faded from the sky, 

Slowly the stars have gathered one by one, 
Calmly the crescent moon mounts up on high. 
And the long day is done. 

With quiet heart my garden-walks I tread, 

Feeling the beauty that I cannot see; 
Beauty and fragrance all around me shed 
By flower, and shrub, and tree. 

Often I linger where the roses pour 

Exquisite odors from each glowing cup; 
Or where the violet, brimmed with sweetness o'er. 
Lifts its small chalice up. 
4'' 



42 



WITHOUT AND WITHIN. 



With fragrant breath the lilies woo me now, 

And softly speaks the sweet-voiced mignonette, 
While heliotropes, with meekly lifted brow, 
Say to me, "Go not yet." 

So for awhile I linger, but not long. 

High in the heavens rideth fiery Mars, 

Careering proudly 'mid the glorious throng, 

Brightest of all the stars. 

But softly gleaming through the curtain's fold, 
The home-star beams with more alluring ray, 
And, as a star led sage and seer of old. 
So it directs my way; 

And leads me in where my young children lie, 

Rosy and beautiful in tranquil rest ; 
The seal of sleep is on each fast-shut eye. 

Heaven's peace within each breast. 

I bring them gifts. Not frankincense nor myrrh, — 

Gifts the adoring Magi humbly brought 
The young child, cradled in the arms of her 
Blest beyond mortal thought ; 

But love — the love that fills my mother-heart 

With a sweet rapture oft akin to pain ; 
Such yearning love as bids the tear-drops start 
And fall like summer rain. 

And faith — that dares, for their dear sakes, to climb 

Boldly, where once it would have feared to go, 
And calmly standing upon heights sublime. 
Fears not the storm below. 



HEREAFTER. 



43 



And prayer. O God ! unto thy throne I come, 

Bringing my darlings, — but I cannot speak. 
With love and awe oppressed, my lips are dumb: 
Grant what my heart would seek ! 



HEREAFTER. 



O LAND beyond the setting sun ! 

O realm more fair than poet's dream ! 
How clear thy silvery streamlets run, 

How bright thy golden glories gleam ! 

Earth holds no counterpart of thine ; 

The dark-browed Orient, jewel-crowned. 
Pales as she bows before thy shrine, 

Shrouded in mystery so profound. 

The dazzling North, the stately West, 
Whose rivers flow from mount to sea ; 

The South, flower-wreathed in languid rest, — 
What are they all, compared with thee? 

All lands, all realms beneath yon dome. 

Where God's own hand hath hung the stars. 

To thee with humblest homage come, 
O world beyond the crystal bars ! 

Thou blest Hereafter ! Mortal tongue 
Hath striven in vain thy speech to learn. 

And Fancy wanders, lost among 

The flowery paths for which we yearn. 



44 HEREAFTER. 

i» But well we know that fair and bright, 
Far beyond human ken or dream, 
Too glorious for our feeble sight, 
Thy skies of cloudless azure beam. 

We know thy happy valleys lie 
In green repose, supremely blest ; 

We know against thy sapphire sky 
Thy mountain-peaks sublimely rest. 

And sometimes even now we catch 

Faint gleamings from thy far-off shore, 

And still with eager eyes we watch 
For one sweet sign or token more. 

For, oh, the deeply loved are there ! 

The brave, the fair, the good, the wise, 
Who pined for thy serener air. 

Nor shunned thy solemn mysteries. 

There are the hopes that, one by one. 
Died even as we gave them birth ; 

The dreams that passed ere well begun. 
Too dear, too beautiful for earth. 

The aspirations, strong of wing, 

Aiming at heights we could not reach ; 

The songs we tried in vain to sing ; 

The thoughts too vast for human speech ; 

Thou hast them all. Hereafter ! Thou 
Shalt keep them safely till that hour 

When, with God's seal on heart and brow, 
We claim them in immortal power ! 



MAUD^AND MADGE. 



45 



MAUD AND MADGE. 

Maud in a crimson velvet chair 

Strings her pearls on a silken thread, 
While, lovingly lifting her golden hair, 

Soft airs wander about her head. 
She has silken robes of the softest flow, 

She has jewels rare and a chain of gold. 
And her two white hands flit to and fro. 

Fair as the dainty toys they hold. 

She has tropical birds and rare perfumes ; 

Pictures that speak to the heart and eye; 
For her each flower of the Orient blooms, — 

FoV her the song and the lute swell high ; 
But daintily stringing her gleaming pearls 

She dreams to-day in her velvet chair. 
While the sunlight sleeps in her golden curls, 

Lightly stirred by the odorous air. 

Down on the beach, when the tide goes out, 

Madge is gathering shining shells ; 
The sea-breeze blows her locks about ; 

O'er bare brown feet the white sand swells. 
Coarsest serge is her gown of gray, 

Faded and torn her apron blue, 
And there in the beautiful, dying day 

The girl still thinks of the work to do. 



46 



MAUD AND AIADGE. 

Stains of labor are on her hands, 

Lost is the young form's airy grace; 
And standing there on the shining sands 

You read her fate in her weary face. 
Up with the dawn to toil all day 

For meagre fare and a place to sleep ; 
Seldom a moment to dream or play, ^"^ 

Little leisure to laugh or weep. 

Beautiful Maud, you think, maybe, 

Lying back in your velvet chair. 
There is naught in common 'twixt her and thee,- 

You scarce could breathe in the self-same air. 
But ah ! the blood in her girlish heart 

Leaps quick as yours at her nature's call. 
And ye, though moving so far apart. 

Must share one destiny after all. 

Love shall come to you both one day. 

For still must be what aye hath been ; 
And under satin or russet gray 

Hearts will open to let him in. 
Motherhood with its joy and woe 

Each must compass through burning pain, — 
You, fair Maud, with your brow of snow, 

Madge with her brown hands labor-stained. 

Each shall sorrow and each shall weep. 

Though one is in hovel, one in hall ; 
Over your gold the frost shall creep. 

As over her jet the snows will fall. 
Exquisite Maud, you lift your eyes 

At Madge out yonder under the sun ; 
And yet, I trow, by the countless ties 

Of a common womanhood ye are one. 



THE BELL OF ST. PAUL'S. ^j 



THE BELL OF ST. PAUL'S. 

Like the great bell of St. Paul's, which only sounds when the 
King is dead." 

Toll ! toll, thou solemn bell ! 

A royal head lies low, 
And mourners through the palace halls 

Slowly and sadly go. 
Lift up thine awful voice, 

Thou, silent for so long ! 
Say that a monarch's soul has passed 

To join the shadowy throng. 

Sound yet again, thou bell ! 

Mutely thine iron tongue. 
Prisoned within yon high church-tower, 

For many a year has hung. 
Now, while thy mournful peal 

Startles a nation's ear, 
The echo rings from shore to shore, 

That the whole world may hear. 

A whisj)er from tlie past 

Blends with each solemn tone 
That from those brazen lips of thine 

Upon the air is thrown. 
Never had trumpet's peal, ■ 

Or ''clarion wild and shrill," 



48 THE BELL OF ST. PAUL'S. 

Such power as that low undertone 
The listener's heart to thrill. 

Come, tell us tales, thou bell, 

Of those of old renown, 
Those sturdy warrior kings who fought 

For sceptre and for crown ! 
Tell of the Lion-heart 

Whose pulses moved the world ; 
Of her whose banners flew so far 

O'er land and sea unfurled ! 

From out the buried years — 

From many a royal tomb, 
Whence neither pomp nor power could chase 

The dim, sepulchral gloom, 
Lo ! now a pale, proud line, 

They glide before our eyes ! — 
Art thou a wizard, mighty bell. 

To bid the dead arise ? 

Toll on ! toll on, thou bell ! 

Once more lift up thy voice, 
Though never yet did peal of thine 

Bid human hearts rejoice ! 
Solemn and stern thou art. 

In silence and in pride. 
Ne'er lifting up thy thunder tones 

Save when a king has died. 

Yet they to whom a world 

Has bowed in reverence. 
And on their graves poured gushing tears 

Of voiceless eloquence, — 



LEND R A. 

Kings in the realm of mind, 

Princes in that of thought, 
\<\\o for themselves, by word and deed, 

Immortal names have wrought, — 

Have to the dust gone down. 

And thou, O haughty bell, 
For these — old England's kingliest sons — 

Tolled no funereal knell ! 
Ah ! happier far than thou 

In all thy silent pride, 
The humblest village bell that rings 

For bridegroom and for bride ; 
That calls the babe to baptism, 

The weary soul to prayer, 
And tolls when loved ones spring from earth 

To heaven's serener air ! 



49 



LENORA. 



I KISSED thy child last night, Lenora, 
And in kissing her, kissed thee, 

Though between our hearts, Lenora, 
Rolls a darkly silent sea. 

Though between our lips, Lenora, 
Damp and chill the veil may be ! 

Yet the kiss I left, Lenora, 

On the sweet lips of thy child, 

Thrilled through all ni)' frame, Lenora, 
Made my heart beat (juick and wild, 
5 



5° 



HYMN TO LIFE. 

Brought my boyhood back, Lenora, 
For I saw thee when she smiled ! 

And did not thy breast, Lenora, 
Heave beneath its snowy shroud, 

When I clasped thy child, Lenora, 
And my lips to hers were bowed. 

While with passionate prayer, Lenora, 
Thy sweet name I called aloud ? 

No one answered me, Lenora ! 

Only those pure, wondering eyes 
Gazed upon mine own, Lenora, 

With a look of grieved surprise. 
As an angel might, Lenora, 

On a mortal's tears and siehs ! 



HYMN TO LIFE. 

Ah, Life, dear Life, how beautiful art thou! 
All day sweet, chiming voices in my heart 
Have hymned thy praises joyfully as now. 
Telling how fair thou art ! 

This morn, while yet the dew was on the flowers, 

They sang like skylarks, soaring while they sing; 
This noon, like birds within their leafy bowers, 
Warbling with folded wing. 



nVMX TO LIFE. 



51 



Slow fades the twilight from the glowing west, 

Antl one pale star hangs o'er yon mountain's brow; 
With deeper joy, that may not be repressed, 
O Life, they hail thee now ! 

And not alone from this poor heart of mine 

Do these glad notes of grateful love ascend ; 
Voices from mount and vale and woodland shrine 
In the full chorus blend. 

The young leaves feel thy presence and rejoice 

The while they frolic with the wanton breeze; 
And pxans sweeter than a seraph's voice 
Rise from the swaying trees. 

Each flower that hides within the forest dim. 
Where mortal eye may ne'er its beauty see, 
Waves its light censer, while it breathes a hymn 
In humble praise of thee. 

Through quivering pines the gentle south winds stray. 

Singing low songs that bid the tear-drops start; 
And thoughts of thee are in each trembling lay. 
Thrilling the listener's heart. 

Old Ocean lifts his solemn voice on high. 
Thy name, O Life, repeating evermore, 
While sweeping gales and rushing storms reply 
From many a far-off shore. 

The stars are gathering in the darkening skies, 
15ut our dull ears their music may not hear, 
Tliough, while we list, their swelling anthems rise 
l^xultingly and clear! 



52 



A DEAD LOVE. 



Linger thou with me yet a little while! 

Ah ! leave me not until my work is done ! 
Take not from me the glory of thy smile 
Till I the goal have won ! 

Earth is so beautiful ! She weareth still 

The golden radiance of life's early day; 
Still Love and Hope for me their chalice fill, 
Oh, turn not thou away ! 

A deep voice answers to my earnest prayer; 

Through every fibre of my frame it thrills; 
A wondrous presence all the trembling air 
With solemn glory fills ! 

Not thine, O Life! One mightier far than thou- 
He who ordained the path that thou hast trod- 
Says to my soul, while thus I humbly bow, 
"Be still— for I am God!" 



A DEAD LOVE. 

It is dead, 
Waiting here for its narrow bed ! 
Bring ye the face-cloth snowy white, 

Over the forehead its chill folds lay ; 
Never again shall it meet my sight 

Till it rises up at the judgment-day ! 

Lay it low. 
Under the sods where the violets grow ! 



A DEAD LOVE. 

Hide it away in tlie darksome earth, 
This [)ale clay that was once so dear; 

Yesterday of such priceless worth, — 
What is it worth now — lying here? 

Dumb and cold, 
No soul sleeps in the marble mould ! 
Yet, for the sake of what hath been, 

Smooth ye its grave with reverent care; 
Speak no word of its pain or sin, 

While o'er the dead I breathe a prayer. 

Will it rise. 
Haunting me with its solemn eyes? 
Will it come when the night grows deep, 

Troubling me in my silent room? 
With it shall I dread vigils keep — 

It and my soul in the awful gloom? 

No ! ah, no ! 
Soul of mine, it shall not be so! 
Dead and buried, I roll a stone 

Unto the door of the sepulchre. There 
Rest, O sleeper, whose cry or moan 

Never acain shall vex the air! 







53 



54 



FAITH. 



FAITH. 

The young child trembles at the brooding darks, 
And shrinks, and cowers, and dare not lift its eyes. 
Lest it should see some awful form arise, 

And for some dread alarm it ever harks. 

Yet if it may but touch its father's hands, 
It bravely walks along the darksome way, 
Fearing the night no more than broadest day 

While close beside that faithful friend it stands. 

So when the path grows dark that I must tread ; 
When my poor soul sees not which way to go, 
And may not life's mysterious windings know, 

Clasping my Father's hand I will not dread 
The gathering shadows, but in deepest night 
Walk calmly on, "by faith," if not "by sight." 



HYMN, 

FOR THE OPENING OF A REFORM SCHOOL. 

Floating through the misty twilight 

Of the half- forgotten years. 
Hark ! a solemn voice and tender 

Falls to-day upon our ears. 



HYMN. 

Thine, () Christ! and as we listen, 

Lo ! thy loving face we see, 
And thy lips are still repeating, 

" Feed my lambs, if ye love me!" 

"Feed my lambs!" Our Lord and Master, 

We are here thy will to do ; 
Far the wayward ones have wandered ; 

We will find them pastures new. 

From the mountains, cold and dreary, — 
From the forests, dark and deep, — 

Where Ihe way is long and lonely, 
And the paths are rough and steep, — 

We will call them. Yet our voices 

It may be they will not know ; 
Thou must speak, O tender Shepherd, 

Speak in accents soft and low ! 

They are thine, however widely 

They have wandered from thy side ; 

When thou callest they will answer; - 

Son of God, be thou their guide ! 



55 



56 MARGERY GREY. 



MARGERY GREY. 

A LEGEND OF VERMONT. 

Fair the cabin-walls were gleaming in the sunbeams' 

golden glow 
On that lovely April morning, near a hundred years ago; 
And upon the hxmible threshold stood the young wife, 

Margery Grey, 
With her fearless blue eyes glancing down the lonely forest 

way. 

In her arms her laughing baby with its fother's dark hair 

played, 
As he lingered there beside them leaning on his trusty 

spade ; 
"I am going to the wheat-lot," with a smile said Robert 

Grey; 
"Will you be too lonely, Margery, if I leave you all the 

day?" 

Then she smiled a cheerful answer, ere she spoke a single 

word, 
And the tone of her replying was as sweet as song of 

bird ; 
"No," she said, "I'll take the baby, and go stay with 

Annie Brown ; 
You must meet us there, dear Robert, ere the sun has quite 

gone down." 



MARGERY GREY. 



57 



Thus they parted. Strong and sturdy all day long he 

labored on, 
Spading up the fertile aeres from the stubborn forest 

won ; 
And when lengthening shadows warned him that the sun 

was in the west, 
Down the woodland aisles he hastened, whispering, "Now 

for home and rest !" 

But when he had reached the clearing of their friend, a 
mile away. 

Neither wife nor cliild was waiting there to welcome 
Robert Grey. 

"She is safe at home," said Annie, "for she went an 
hour ago. 

While the woods were still illumined by the sunset's crim- 
son glow." 

Back he sped, but night was falling, and the path he 
scarce could see; 

Here and there his feet were guided onward by some deep- 
gashed tree; 

When at length he gained the cabin, black and desolate 
it stood, 

Cold the hearth, the windows rayless, in the stillest soli- 
tude. 

With a murmured prayer, a shudder, and a sob of anguish 

wild, 
Back he darted through the forest, calling on his wife and 

child. 
Soon the scattered settlers gathered from the clearings far 

and near, 
And the solemn woods resounded with their voices rising 

clear. 



58 MARGERY GREY. 

Torches flared, and fires were kindled, and the horn's 
long peal rang out, 

While the startled echoes answered to the hardy wood- 
man's shout ; 

But in vain their sad endeavor, night by night, and day 
by day; 

For no sign nor token found they of the child or Margery 
Grey ! 

Woe! woe for pretty Margery! With her baby on her 

arm 
On her homeward way she started, fearing nothing that 

could harm; 
With a lip and brow untroubled, and a heart in utter 

rest. 
Through the dim woods she went singing to the darling 

at her breast. 

But in sudden terror pausing, gazed she round in blank 

dismay, — 
Where were all the white-scarred hemlocks pointing out 

the lonely way? 
God of Mercies ! She had wandered from the pathway ! 

not a tree, 
Giving mute but kindly warning, could her straining 

vision see ! 

Twilight deepened into darkness, and the stars came out 

on high; 
All was silent in the forest, save the owl's low, boding cry; 
Round about her in the midnight stealthy shadows softly 

crept. 
And the babe upon her bosom closed its timid eyes and 

sle]jt. 



MARGERY GREY. 



59 



Hark ! a shout! and in the distance she could see a torch's 

gleam ; 
But, alas! she could not reach it, and it vanished like a 

dream ; 
Then another shout,— another ! but she shrieked and 

sobbed in vain, 
Rushing wildly toward the presence she could never, never 

gain. 

Morning came, and with the sunbeams hope and courage 

rose once more; 
Surely ere another nightfall her long wanderings would 

be o'er; 
So she soothed the wailing baby, and when faint from 

want of food, 
Ate the wintergreens and acorns that she found within the 

wood. 

O the days so long and dreary 1 O the nights more dreary 

still! 
More than once she heard the sounding of the horn from 

hill to hill; 
More than once a smouldering fire in some sheltered nook 

she found. 
And she knew her husband's footprints close beside it on 

the ground. 

Dawned the fourth relentless morning, and the sun's un- 

pitying eye 
Looked upon the haggard mother, looked to see the baby 

die; 
All day long its plaintive meanings wrung the heart of 

Margery Grey, 
All night long her bosom cradled it, a pallid thing of 

clay. 



6o MARGERY GREY. 

I'hree days more she bore it with her, on her rough and 
toilsome way, 

Till across its marble beauty stole the plague-spot of de- 
cay; 

Then she knew that she must leave it in the wilderness to 
sleep, 

^Vhere the prowling wild beasts only watch above its grave 
should keep. 

Dumb with grief she sat beside it. Ah ! how long she 
never knew ! 

Were the tales her mother taught her of the dear All- 
Father true, 

When the skies were brass above her, and the earth was 
cold and dim, 

And when all her tears and pleadings brought no answer 
down from Him? 

But at last stern Life, the tyrant, bade her take her burden 

up,— 
To her lips so pale and shrunken pressed again the bitter 

cup; 
Up she rose, still tramping onward through the forest flir 

and wide. 
Till the May-flowers bloomed and perished, and the sweet 

June roses died ! 

Till July and August brought her fruits and berries from 

their store; 
Till the golden-rod and aster said that summer was no 

more ; 
Till the maples and the birches donned their robes of red 

and gold ; 
Till the birds were hasting southward, and the days were 

growing cold. 



MARGERY GREY. Ol 

Was she doomed to roam forever o'er the desolated 
earth, 

She, the last and only being in tliose wilds of human 
birth? 

Sometimes from her dreary pathway wolf or black bear 
turned away, 

But not once did human presence bless the sight of Mar- 
gery Grey. 

One chill morning in October, when the woods were 

brown and bare. 
Through the streets of ancient Charlestown, with a strange, 

bewildered air. 
Walked a gaunt and pallid woman, whose disheveled 

locks of brown 
O'er her naked breast and shoulders in the wind were 

streamintf; down. 



Wondering glances fell upon her; women veiled their 
modest eyes. 

Ere tliey slowly ventured near her, drawn by pitying sur- 
prise. 

"'Tis some crazy one," they whispered. Back her tan- 
gled hair she tossed, 

"O kind hearts, take pity on me, for I am not mad, but 
lost!" 



Then she told her piteous story, in a vague, disjointed 

way, 
And with cold white lips she murmured, "Take me home 

to Robert Grey !" 

6 



62 MY FRIENDS. 

"But the river?" said they, pondering. " We are on the 

eastern side; 
How crossed you its rapid waters? Deep the channel is, 

and wide. ' ' 

But she said she had not crossed it. In her strange, 
erratic course, 

She had wandered far to nortliward, till she reached its 
fountain source 

In the dark Canadian forests, — and then, blindly roam- 
ing on, 

Down the wild New Hampshire valleys her bewildered 
feet had gone. 

O the joy-bells! sweet their ringing on the frosty autumn 

air ! 
O the boats across the waters ! how they leaped the tale to 

bear! 
O the wondrous golden sunset of the blest October day 
When that weary wife was folded to the heart of Robert 

Grey! 



MY FRIENDS. 

I've no great nor titled friends — 

Lords nor dames of high degree ; 
Grandeur ne'er my steps attends. 

Rank nor glory compass me. 
Throwing wide my garden's gate. 

Courtiers ne'er its paths explore; 
And no liveried footmen wait 

At my humble cottage-door. 



A/y FRIENDS. 63 

Yet at pensive eventide, 

When the day's long toil is past, 
And from wanderings far and wide 

Thought comes home to rest at last ; 
When the firelight, leaping high, 

Brightens all the quiet room. 
And the startled shadows fly, 

Bearing off the dusky gloom ; 

Then — a brave and noble band — 

Over mount and over sea. 
And from out the "summer-land," 

Come my friends to sit with me. 
Heads with bay-wreaths greenly: crowned ; 

Hands that clasp the victor's palm; 
Presences that all around 

Shed a most unearthly calm : 

Chaucer, wearing on his face 

All the freshness of the morn ; 
Dreamy Spenser, whose rare grace 

Far in faerie-land was born ; 
Milton, grand, majestic, blind, 

Yet seeing God by inner sight ; 
Shakspeare, in the realm of mind 

Crowned king by kingly right ; 

Dante, with uplifted brow. 

And a sadly royal mien ; 
Camoens praising, soft and low, 

"Sweetest eyes were ever seen;" 
Keats, to whom the springtime brought 

All the glory of the year. 
And whose dying strains were caught 

By the angels listening near; 



64 MY FRIENDS. 

Wordsworth, in serenest calm, 

Holding converse with the skies ; 
Cowper, singing some low psalm, 

Set to human harmonies^ 
Byron, still forlornly proud. 

In his desolate disdain; 
Shelley, dreaming of his shroud. 

By the blue Italian main, — 

These — and others. All ! the place 

Seems a temple grand and fair. 
To whose lofty, vaulted space 

Priest and priestess still repair ! 
Sappho with her golden lyre, 

Crowned Corinna's kindling cheek, 
Pale Aspasia's eye of fire, 

Saintly Heloise, strong, yet meek, 

Hemans, breathing changeful strains, 

Half of joy, and half of woe; 
L. E. L., whose song contains 

Just a fond heart's overflow; 
Our own Margaret's lifted face, 

Wearing still its queenly dower; 
Sorrowing Bronte's quiet grace. 

Veiling such transcendent power. 

Ah, another! — priestess, seer. 

Bay-wreathed poet, three in one, — 
Star-crowned angel, singing clear, 

Where there is no need of sun, — 
Thou whose Florence mourns thee still 

Less as woman than as saint, — 
Whose Aurora's voice can thrill 

With new life hearts long a-faint, — 



THE riNE- TREES. 

Need I name thee? () beloved! 

Friends of mine, tlirougli good or ill; 
Others fail me — ye are proved — 

Time nor change your hearts can chill! 
Ye who being dead yet speak, 

Ye afar and yet most near; 
Let your words the silence break. 

And my soul runs quick to hear ! 



THE PINE-TREES. 

O SOLEMN pines, now dark and still. 
When last I stood beneath your shade, 

Strange minstrels on their airy harps 

Among your trembling branches played. 

That wild, weird music ! now the strain 
Gushed forth triumphantly and clear, — 

Now like a living voice it seemed. 
Wailing and moaning in my ear! 

Beneath my feet the village lay 

As calmly as a child asleep, 
While, like stern guards, the mountains round 

Seemed o'er its rest close watch to keep. 

Like burnished gold, the high church-spire 
In the last red light of sunset gleamed; 

And from each far-off window-pane 
A flood of dazzling radiance streamed. 
6-^ 



66 THE PINE-TREES. 

And softly, emerald banks between, 

The river glided on its way, 
Nor paused where cedars darkly wave, 

Nor loitered where the mill-wheels play. 

The western skies were all aflame, — 
A rosy mist hung o'er the hills, — 

And leaping down the mountain-side, 

Sparkled and flashed the murmuring rills. 

'Twas a fair scene, and while I gazed. 
The cloudlets donned a soberer hue, 

And suddenly a smgle star 

Shone tremblingly amid the l)lue. 

And I, a glad, light-hearted girl. 
Beneath your shade, O stately trees. 

Bared my young brow and waving hair 
To meet the kisses of the breeze. 



Again, as in the long ago. 

The pine boughs wave above my head, 
But, ah ! the light and loveliness 

And glory of the scene have fled ! 

The sky is now a leaden gray ; 

The stream an icy chain hath bound ; 
And here and there a snow-wreath lies 

Upon the dark and frozen ground. 

The winds are out — the shivering trees 
Lift their bare branches high in air. 

And wildly toss their arms aloft, 
Like giants writhing in despair! 



NOVEMBER. 67 

Afar yet near the church-yard lies; 

No chisteriiig leaves conceal it now; 
Through blinding tears new mounds I see, 

New graves where I in prayer must bow. 

But not to grieve o'er buried hours 
Sought I your shade to-day, ye pines, 

Though many a bright and fadeless wreath 
Fond memory round each crest entwines. 

For, even while with murmuring lips 

Ye whisper of the past to me, 
A quiet home 'mid clustering trees. 

As in a vision, I can see, — 

A home where childhood's merry laugh 
Blends with the song of bird and bee,' 

Where my heart finds serenest rest. 

Where love-lit eyes now watch for me ! 



NOVEMBER. 



Fie upon thcc, November! thou dost ape 

The airs of thy young sisters; — thou hast stolen 

'I'he witching smile of May to grace thy lip. 

And April's rare, capricious loveliness 

Thou 'rt trying to put on ! Dost thou not know 

vSuch freaks do not become thee? Thou shouldst be 

A staid and sober matron, (juietly 

Laying aside the follies of thy jouth, 



68 HILDA, SPINNING. 

And robing thee in that cahii dignity 
Meet for the handmaid of tlie dying year. 
But, ah! thou art a sad coquette, although 
The frost of age is on thee ! Thou dost sport 
With every idle breeze that wooeth thee; 
And toy and frolic with the aged leaves 
That flutter round thee. Unto every low, 
Soft murmur of the brooklet, thou dost lend 
A willing ear; and crowning thy pale brow 
With a bright coronet that thou hast woven 
Of the stray sunbeams summer left behind, 
Thou dost bend o'er it lovingly, and strive 
To answer in a cadence clear and sweet 
As spring's first whispers! In the valley now 
The flowers have faded, and the singing-birds 
Greet thee no longer when thou wanderest forth 
Through the dim forest; and yet thou dost smile. 
And skip as lightly o'er the withered grass, 
As if thou hadst not decked thee in the robes 
That thy dead sisters wore in festal hours ! 



HILDA, SPINNING. 

Spinning, spinning, by the sea, 

All the night ! 
On a stormy, rock-ribbed shore, 
Where the north winds downward pour. 
And the tempests fiercely sweep 
From the mountains to the deep, 
Hilda spins beside the sea. 

All the night ! 



HILDA, SPINNIXG. (^g 

Spinning, at her lonely window, 

JJy the sea ! 
With her candle bnrning clear, 
Every night of all the year. 
And her sweet voice crooning low, 
Quaint old songs of love and woe, 
Spins she at her lonely window, 

By the sea. 

On a bitter night in March, 

Long ago, 
Hilda, very young and fiiir. 
With a crown of golden hair. 
Watched the tempest raging wild, 
^\'atched the roaring sea — and smiled 
Through that woeful night in March, 

Long ago ! 

What though all the winds were out 

In their might ? 
Richard's boat was tried and true ; 
Stanch and brave his hardy crew ; 
Strongest he to do or dare. 
Said she, breathing forth a prayer, 
" He is safe, though winds are out 

In their might !" 

But at length the morning dawned, 

Still and clear; 
Calm, in azure splendor, lay 
All the waters of the bay; 
And the ocean's angry moans 
Sank to solemn undertones. 
As, at last, the morning dawned, 

Still and clear ! 



>iO HILDA, SPINNING. 

With her waves of golden hair 

Floating free, 
Hilda ran along the shore, 
Gazing off the waters o'er; 
And the fishermen replied, 
" He will come in with the tide," 
As they saw her golden hair 

Floating free ! 

Ah ! he came in with the tide, — 

Came alone ! 
Tossed upon the shining sands — 
Ghastly face and clutching hands — 
Seaweed tangled in his hair — 
Bruised and torn his forehead fair — 
Thus he came in with the tide. 

All alone ! 

Hilda watched beside her dead, 

Day and night. 
Of those hours of mortal woe 
Human ken may never know; 
She was silent, and his ear 
Kept the secret, close and dear, 
Of her watch beside her dead, 

Day and night ! 

What she promised in the darkness. 

Who can tell ? 
But upon that rock-ribbed shore 
Burns a beacon evermore ! 
And beside it, all the night, 
Hilda guards the lonely light, 
Though what vowed she in the darkness. 

None may tell ! 



OUTGROWN. 

Spinning, spinning by the sea, 

All the night ! 
While her candle, gleaming wide 
O'er the restless, rolling tide, 
Guides with steady, changeless ray 
The lone fisher up the bay, 
Hilda spins beside the sea. 

Through the night ! 

Fifty years of patient spinning 

By the sea ! 
Old and worn, she sleeps to-day, 
While the sunshine gilds the bay; 
But her candle, shining clear, 
Every night of all the year, 
Still is telling of her spinning 

By the sea ! 



71 



OUTGROWN. 

Nay, you wrong her, my friend, she's not fickle ; her love 

she has simply outgrown ; 
One can read the whole matter, translating her heart by 

the light of one's own. 

Can you bear me to talk with you frankly? There is much 

that my heart would say, 
And you know we were children together, have quarreled 

and "made up" in play. 



72 



OUTGROWN. 



And so, for the sake of old friendship, I venture to tell you 

the truth. 
As plainly, perhaps, and as bluntly, as I might in our 

earlier youth. 

Five summers ago, when you wooed her, you stood on the 

self-same ijlane, 
Face to face, heart to heart, never dreaming your souls 

could be parted again. 

She loved you at that time entirely, in the bloom of her 

life's early May, 
And it is not her fault, I repeat it, that she does not love 

you to-day. 

Nature never stands still, nor souls either. They ever go 

up or go down ; 
And hers has been steadily soaring, — but how has it been 

with your own ? 

She has struggled, and yearned, and aspired, — grown purer 
and wiser each year; 

The stars are not farther above you, in yon luminous at- 
mosphere ! 

For she whom you crowned with fresh roses, down yonder, 
five summers ago. 

Has learned that the first of our duties to God and our- 
selves is to grow. 

Her eyes they are sweeter and calmer, but their vision is 

clearer as well ; 
Her voice has a tenderer cadence, but is pure as a silver 

bell. 



OUTGROWN. 



73 



Her face has the look worn by those who with God and 

his angels have talked ; 
The white robes she w'cars are less white than the spirits 

with w'hom she has walked. 

And yon? Have you aimed at the highest? Have you, 

too, aspired and })rayed ? 
Have you looked upon evil unsullied? have you conquered 

it undismayed ? 

Have you, too, grown purer and wiser, as the months and 

the years have rolled on ? 
Did you meet her this morning rejoicing in the triumph 

of victory won? 

Nay, hear me ! The truth cannot harm you. When to- 
day in her presence you stood, 

\\'as the hand that you gave her as white and clean as that 
of her womanhood? 

Go measure yourself by her standard. Look back on the 

years that have fled \ 
Then ask, if you need, why she tells you that the love of 

her girlhood is dead ! 

She cannot look down to her lover; her love, like her 

soul, aspires ; 
He must stand by her side, or above her, who would 

kindle its holy fires. 

Now, farewell ! For the sake of old friendship I have 

ventured to tell you the truth, 
As plainly, perhaps, and as bluntly, as I might in our 

earlier youth. 

7 



74 



A PICTURE. 



A PICTURE. 

A LOVELY bit of dappled green 
Shut in the circling hills between, 
While farther off blue mountains stand 
Like giant guards on either hand. 

The quiet road in still repose 
Follows where'er the brooklet flows; 
And in and out it glides along, 
Lured by the river's rippling song. 

Afar, you see the steepled town 
From yonder hillside looking down ; 
And sometimes, when the south wind swells, 
You hear the chiming of its bells. 

But here, beneath embowering trees. 
Lulled by the hum of droning bees. 
The old brown farmhouse seems to sleep. 
So calm its rest is and so deep. 

And there, beside the rustic bridge, 
From which the path climbs yonder ridge. 
The lazy cattle seek the shade 
By the umbrageous willows made. 

The sky is like a hollow pearl. 
Save where warm sunset clouds unfurl 
Their flaming colors. Lo ! a star. 
Even as we gaze, gleams forth afar. 



A PICTURE. 

And this is all yon see? The scene 
Lies fair, you say, these hills between? 
You'll bear the picture far away, 
A joy for many a coming day? 

friend, I see far more ! I see 
A Presence under every tree ! 

1 meet the gleam of earnest eyes 
Where'er these feathery larches rise. 

Moving adown the winding road 

I see the form of one who trod 

Its light sands many a year ago, 

I.ured by the brooklet's murmuring flow. 

His living form. No pallid ghost. 
No wandering phantom, tempest-tossed ! 
The grave has given up its dead, 
With no dark cerecloth round its head ! 

Crowned with immortal youth he stands. 
Reaching to me his eager hands ; 
But yet, methinks, a vague surprise 
Looks outward from those searching eyes. 

They take no note of Time who dwell 
Where blooms the heavenly asphodel, — 
They grow not old who wander where 
Life's perfect flower perfumes the air. 

But ah ! our years are long, and I 
Have kept count as they floated by ; 
He and the scene no change have known, 
Its seal is stamped on me alone ! 



75 



^6 THE PILGRIM. 



THE PILGRIM. 

'Tis sweet to rest beneath the pahii-tree's shade, 
Beside the fountain murmuring in its flow, 

And hear the rustling by the young leaves made, 
As the soft breezes fan them to and fro. 

'Tis sweet to bare my hot and throbbing brow, 
And let the cool wind lift my clustering hair; 

And while earth's twilight tones are hushed and low. 
The vesper hymn of bird and flower to share. 

Pleasant to take the sandals from my feet, 
Wayworn and weary, and with dust defiled ; 

And, idly lingering in dalliance sweet. 
Toy with the waters as a sportive child. 

Oh ! rest is sweet, and sweet this brooding calm, — 
This silence holier than prayer or psalm ; 
And sweet the dreams that hover round me here, 
Making the unattained seem strangely near. 

But I must on, though long the way and dreary. 
Though heart grow faint, and brain and feet grow weary : 
O'er scorching sands, o'er trackless solitudes. 
Where Danger lurks, and Death forever broods. 

For far across the desert's sandy waste 

Lies the fair City to whose walls I haste ; 

And thitherward I press, my eager eyes 

Fixed on the point where yet its towers shall rise. 



.1 MOTHER'S ANSWER. 

Stately and beauliful and fair to see, — 

Fair as the morn when night's dim shadows flee ! 

Not till its myriad glories on me shine, 

Shall the full right to peaceful rest be mine. 



77 



A MOTHER'S ANSWER. 

Which do I love best? Question strange is thine ! 

Dost ask a mother which she loves the best, 
Of the fair children that a hand divine 

In tender love hath lain upon her breast ? 

Which do I love best? When our first-born came, 
And his low wailing filled my darkened room, 

On my soul's altar glowed an incense flame. 
And light ineffable dispersed the gloom. 

And since that hour, heart-music rare and sweet 
Hath floated through my spirit's inmost cell ; 

Oft hath its low peal given me strength to meet 
Alike Care's thrall, and Pleasure's luring spell. 

Now — on my happy breast a babe is nestling. 
With her dear father's darkly earnest eyes. 

And soft brown hair upon her forehead resting. 
And rosebud mouth that smiles in sweet surprise. 

Her very helplessness doth plead for love ; 

Yet of no sudden growth mine own hath been ; 
Taught by an instinct springing from above. 

The mother loves her child although unseen. 



78 THE DREAM-LAND GRAVE. 

And ere her large, soft eyes had seen the light, 
I longed to clasp her to my yearning breast; 

Ah ! God's dear gifts make all my pathway bright, — 
I cannot tell thee which I love the best ! 



THE DREAM-LAND GRAVE. 

I DREAMED last night of a lonely grave 

With the grass of years o'ergrown, 
Above it the wind through the shuddering pines 

Swept with a wailing moan ; 
A sluggish river rolled slowly by 

With a slumberous monotone, 
While down from the depths of the frowning sky 

One quivering starbeani shone. 

And I dreamed that over that lonely grave 

In dumb despair I hung ; 
No passionate prayer, no yearning cry, 

Broke from my trembling tongue ; 
But still through the weary, dreary hours 

To the desolate mound I clung. 
And still in my ear, till the morn was gray, 

The sob of the river rung. 

O soul of mine ! In that dream-land grave 

What beautiful hope lay dead ? 
What dream of my youth lay buried there 

With the cerecloth round its head ? 
What love outgrown, or forgotten long, 

Slept well in that narrow bed ? 



FOR A SILVER WEDDING. 

Wliat memory, born of the hallowed past, 
AVaked not at the tears I shed ? 

I never may know ! O dream-land grave, 

Thou keepest thy secret well ! 
From thy dim, mysterious depths no voice 

Comes forth thy tale to teli. 
But still, in a waking dream, I hear 

The river's sobbing swell. 
And the wailing wind in the shuddering pines 

Sounds like a funeral knell ! 



79 



FOR A SILVER WEDDING. 

Give us joy to-night, O friends ! 
Past, for us, the dewy freshness 

Of life's early morning hours ; 
Past the Springtime's tender beauty, 
Pale and dead its first fair flowers. 
But the Summer's noonday glory 

Floods the sunny path we tread ; 
Round us still, from countless censers. 
Richest sweets are daily shed ! 

Side by side — together ! 
Hand in hand — together ! 
Five-and-twenty years together 
We have faced life's changeful weather, — 
Keeping step with one another, — 
Bearing burdens for each other, — 

Give us joy ! 



3o FOR A SILVER WEDDING. 

Give us joy to-night, O friends ! 
By-and-by will come our Autumn, 

When the crimson leaves will fall, 
And the birds, so lately tuneful, 

Will be silent, one and all. 
But the harvest will be garnered, 
And our life-work nearly done, 
And with smiles upon our faces 
We will watch the setting sun. 

While the shadows lengthen, 
Love and Faith shall strengthen, 
And we'll sit and rest together 
In the lovely Autumn weather, — 
Clinging closer to each other. 
Leaning still on one another, — 

Give us joy ! 

Give us joy again, O friends ! 
What though night must come, and Winter 

With his breath congealing slow ? 
Stars will blossom in the darkness, 
Violets bloom beneath the snow. 
Five-and-twenty years, O Father, 

Thou hast led us gently on ; 
We can trust Thy tender guidance 
Till the goal at last is won ! 

And when we reach thine Aidenn, 
No longer heavy-laden. 
On the Shining Shore together. 
Fearing no more stormy weather. 
We will whisper to each other. 
Clinging still to one another, 

- ■ All is joy!" 



EARTH TO EARTIir 8l 



"EARTH TO EARTH." 

Not within yon vaulted toml), 
With its darkness and its gloom, 
With its murky, heavy air, 
And the silence brooding there, 
Lay me, love, when I must be 
Hidden far away from thee. 

Open not the iron door. 
Oped so oft in days of yore ; 
Place me not beside the dead, 
Whose companionship I dread, 
Where the phantoms come and go, 
Bending o'er the coffins low. 

But when one with icy breath 
In my ear has whispered "death," 
When the heart thy voice can thrill. 
Has grown pulseless, cold, and still, 
Kneel beside me, o'er me bow, 
Press thy last kiss on my brow. 

Lay me then to dreamless rest. 
With the sod above my breast. 
In some quiet, sheltered spot. 
Peaceful as has been our lot, 
Since our solemn vows were said 
On the day when we were wed ! 



82 ''EARTH TO earth:' 

Let the sunlight round me play 
Through the long, bright summer day; 
Let old trees their branches wave 
O'er my green and grassy grave, 
While the changing shadows flit 
In strange beauty over it. 

Plant a white rose at my feet, 

Or a lily fair and sweet, 

With the humble mignonette 

And the blue-eyed violet. 

So beside me, all day long. 

Bird and bee shall weave their song 

Then methinks at eventide. 
With our children by thy side, 
Darling ! thou wilt love to come 
To my calm and quiet home ; 
Thou wilt feel my presence there, 
Filling all the silent air. 

Nearer will I seem to thee. 
Sleeping in the sunlight free, 
Than in yonder vaulted tomb, 
With its darkness and its gloom. 
"Earth to earth and dust to dust" 
Yield thou, love, in solemn trust, 
When our last farewell is said. 
And thy wife is with the dead ! 



AT THE GATE. 



AT THE GATE. 



^l 



A QUIET evening long ago, 

When summer winds breathed soft and low. 

As, lingering long, the perfect day 

In royal splendor passed away. 

A country farm-house, quaint and low, 
Grew radiant in the sunset glow; 
Close by, two grand old cherry-trees 
Swayed slowly to the scented breeze. 

And clinging to the picket gate, 
A little girl of summers eight, 
As if with just anointed eyes, 
Gazed round her in a still surprise. 

The lofty mountains veiled in mist. 
Purple and rose and amethyst. 
Looked tenderly, yet proudly, down 
On silent vale and steepled town. 

A laughing brooklet flowed between 
Fair meadow-banks of softest green, 
Translating, as it swept along. 
Its own sweet fancies into song. 

Around in silent grandeur stood 
The stately children of the wood ; 
Maple and elm and towering pine 
Mantled in folds of dark woodbine. 



84 THE CHERRY-TREE. 

And over all the bending sky 
Hung, a vast dome, serene and high ; 
While upward from the horizon rolled 
Great drifts of crimson, pearl, and gold. 

The bright tints paled; the mountains grew 
Sublimer in their sombre hue; 
Then the soft air grew damp and chill. 
And a lone voice cried, " Whip-po-wil !" 

She raised her eyes. A silver star 
Trembled in those dark depths afar; 
And half in joy, and half in fear. 
That child heart whispered, "God is here!" 



THE CHERRY-TREE. 

Once a careless little child. 
With my elf-locks floating wild. 
Gay as bird, and blithe as bee, 
Played I 'neath the- Cherry-Tree. 

Far and wide the branche . spread ; 
Scarce of blue sky overhead 
Could I catch a glimpse between 
Swaying leaves of deepest green. 

Singing softly, to my breast 
Tenderly my doll I pressed, 
Murmuring love-words, such as mother 
Murmured to my baby brother. 



THE CHERRY-TREE. 

Came to me an aged crone, 
Withered, weary, and alone; 
Weary with the weight of years. 
Worn with toil and burning tears. 

As she sadly gazed on me, 
Playing 'neath the Cherry-Tree, — 
Vague, unwonted terror stole 
Like a shadow o'er my soul. 

"Art thou happy, child?" she said; 
AVhile upon my drooping head 
Lay her wrinkled hand so chill, 
That my very heart grew still. 

"Life is sorrow, — life is pain, — 
Never will there come again 
Joy as pure as this to thee. 
Child, beneath the Cherry-Tree. " 



85 



Swiftly on the glad years flew. 
Till the child a maiden grew; 
And beneath the Cherry-Tree 
Other children played like me. 

On the verge of womanhood, 
With a bounding heart I stood; 
Mourned I then the glowing past? 
Back no longing look I cast ! 

But the future — that was fair 
As the dreams of angels are ; 
And the present — oh ! to me 
It was joy enough to be ! 



86 THE CHERRY-TREE. 

Then again a warning voice 
Bade me tremblingly rejoice : 
And the crone I seemed to see 
Underneath the Cherry- Tree. 

"Girlhood will be quickly o'er; 
Life will bring thee nevermore 
Flowers like those it twineth now, 
Maiden, round thy fair young brow." 



Maidenhood hath passed away; 
I am standing, love, to-day 
By thy side, while soft and clear, 
Sweet young voices greet mine ear. 

Ah ! thou crone ! The child who played 
'Neath the green tree's leafy shade. 
Never even thought of bliss. 
Such as crowds an hour like this ! 

Voice of warning ! Maiden dreams 
Are as bright as sunlit streams ; 
Yet those dreams may sometimes be 
Dim beside reality ! 

Wouldst thou know, love, what hath brought 
Back this flood of olden thought? 
Something still hath said to me, 
"Ye can never happier be!" 

It is well, my heart replied ; 

It is well, whate'er betide; 

Earth would be too much like heaven 

If more bliss to us were given ! 



THREE IViriTE MICE. 



WHAT MY FRIEND SAID TO ME. 

Trouble? dear friend, I know her not. God sent 
His angel Sorrow on my heart to lay 
Her hand in benediction, and to say, 
''Restore, O child, that which thy Father lent, 
For He doth now recall it," long ago. 

His blessed angel Sorrow ! She has walked 
For years beside me, and we two have talked 
As chosen friends together. Thus I know 
Trouble and Sorrow are not near of kin. 
Trouble distrusteth God, and ever wears 
Upon her brow the seal of many cares; 
But Sorrow oft hast deepest peace within. 
She sits with Patience in perpetual calm, 
Waiting till Heaven shall send the healing balm. 



^1 



THREE WHITE MICE. 

A CRUMB FOR THE WEE ONES. 

I WILL tell you a story of three little mice, 

If you will keep still and listen to me, 
Who live in a cage that is cosy and nice, 

And are just as cunning as cunning can be. 
They look very wise, with their pretty, red eyes, 

That seem just exactly like little round beads; 
They are white as the snow, and stand up in a row 

Whenever we do not attend to their needs. 



88 THREE WHITE MICE. 

Stand up in a row, in a comical way, — 

Now folding their forepaws as if saying "please;" 
Now rattling the lattice, as much as to say, 

"We shall not stay here without more bread and 
cheese. ' ' 
They are not at all shy, as you'll find, if you try 

To make them run up in their chamber to bed ; 
If they don't want to go, why, they won't go, — ah! no, 

Though you tap with your finger each queer little head. 

One day as I stood by the side of the cage, 

Through the bars there protruded a funny, round tail ; 
Just for mischief I caught it, and soon, in a rage. 

Its owner set up a most pitiful wail. 
He looked in dismay, — there was something to pay, — 

But what was the matter he could not make out ; 
What was holding him so, when he wanted to go 

To see what his brothers up-stairs were about? 

But soon from the chamber the others rushed down, 

Impatient to learn what the trouble might be ; 
I have not a doubt that each brow wore a frown, 

Only frowns on their brows are not easy to see. 
For a moment they gazed, perplexed and amazed, 

Then began both together to — gnaw off the tail ! 
So quick I released him, — do you think that it pleased 
him? 

And up the small staircase they fled like the gale. 



QUESTIONINGS. 89 



QUESTIONINGS. 

What niother-angel tended thee last night, 

Sweet baby mine ? 
Cradled upon what breast all soft and white 

Didst thou recline? 

Who took thee, frail and tender as thou art. 

Within her arms ? 
And shielded thee, close clasped to her heart. 

From all alarms ? 

Surely that God who lured thee from the breast 

That hoped to be 
The softest pillow and the sweetest nest 

Thenceforth to thee. 

Sent thee not forth into the dread unknown 

Without a guide, 
To grope in darkness, treading all alone 

The path untried. 

Compassionate is He who called thee, child ; 

And well I know 
He sent some Blessed One of aspect mild 

With thee to go 

Through the dark valley, where the shadows dim 

Forever brood, 
Tliat the low music of an angel's liymn 

Might cheer the solitude ! 
S* 



9° 



HYMN. 



HYMN.— No. I 

FOR THE DEDICATION OF A CEMETERY. 
Tune—" Old Hundred." 

Ye Pines, with solemn grandeur crowned, 
Put on your priestly robes to-day; 

Henceforth ye stand on holy ground, 
Where Love and Death hold equal sway. 

Lift up to Heaven each crested head. 
And raise your giant arms on high, 

And swear that o'er our slumbering dead 
Ye will keep "watch and ward" for aye. 

For month by month, and year by year. 
While shine the stars, and rolls the sea. 

Our silent ones shall gather here. 
To rest beneath the greenwood tree. 

Here no rude sight nor sound shall break 
The calmness of their last, long sleep. 

And Earth and Heaven, for Love's sweet sake, 
Shall o'er them ceaseless vigils keep. 

Our silent ones ! Their very dust 

Is precious in our longing eyes ; 
Oh, guard ye well the sacred trust. 

Till God's own voice shall bid them rise ! 



HYMN. 



HYMN.— No. 2. 

FOR THE DEDICATION OF A CEMETERY. 
Tune—" Pleyel's Hymn." 

God, our father's God, we bow 
Reverently before thee now. 
And our hearts and voices raise 
To thy throne in prayer and praise. 

We would pray to Him who knows 
All our sorrows, all our woes ; 
Him whose loving heart can share 
All the griefs his children bear. 

Christ has lain within the tomb, 
Well He knows its fearful gloom ; 
Knows that human hearts must shrink 
From its dark and shadowy brink. 

He whose tears for Lazarus fell. 
Drank of suffering's deepest well ; 
He can pity when we lay 
Our beloved ones away. 

Out of sight, beneath the sod, — 
Then be thou our helper, God ! 
I^et us stay our souls on thee. 
For no other help have we ! 

We would pray, — for, frail and weak, 
Much we need the good we seek ; 



91 



92 



NIGHT AND MORNING. 

We would praise thee, — for thy word 
Tells us that our prayers are heard. 

We would praise thee that at last, 
Death and sin forever past. 
Thy dear children shall arise 
To adore thee in the skies ! 



NIGHT AND MORNING. 

I. 
Night and darkness over all ! 
Nature sleeps beneath a pall ; 
Not a ray from moon or stars 
Glimmers through the cloudy bars; 
Huge and black the mountains stand 
Frowning upon either hand, 
And the river, dark and deep, 
Gropes its way from steep to steep. 
Yonder tree, whose young leaves played 
In the sunshine and the shade, 
Stretches out its arms like one 
Sudden blindness hath undone. 
Pale and dim the rose-queen lies 
Robbed of all her gorgeous dyes. 
And the lily bendeth low, 
Mourner in a garb of Avoe. 
Never a shadow comes or goes, 
Never a gleam its glory throws 
Over cottage or over hall, — 
Darkness broodeth over all ! 



NIGHT AND MORNING. 93 



Night without on Hme and shrine, 
Night within this soul of mine ! 
Groping blindly in the dark, 
Searching for some sure landmark; 
Wrestling oft with unbelief. 
Vexed by questions sharp and brief; 
Yearning what I am to know, 
Whence I came or where I go ; 
Fain to learn the mysteries hid, 
Even the simplest lives amid. 
And its secrets dark to wrest 
From the grave's unflithomed breast; 
Seeking in a maze of creeds 
One best suited to my needs ; 
Tossed upon a sea of doubt. 
Fears within and storms without ; 
Striving still the way to see 
Where the thickest shadows be, 
Reaching ever toward the light, 
In my soul is darkest night ! 

III. 

Lo ! the glorious morning breaks ! 

Nature from her sleep awakes, 

And, in purple pomp, the day 

Bids the darkness flee away. 

Crowned with light the mountains stand 

Royally on either hand. 

And the laughing waters run 

In glad haste to meet the sun. 

Stately trees, exultant, raise 

Their proud heads in grateful praise; 



94 



NIGHT AND MORNING. 

Flowers, dew-laden, everywhere 
Pour rich incense on the air. 
And the ascending vapors rise 
Like the smoke of sacrifice. 
Birds are trilling, bees are humming, 
Swift to greet the new day coming. 
And earth's myriad voices sing 
Hymns of grateful welcoming. 
Bursting from night's heavy thrall, 
Heaven's own light is over all ! 

IV. 

Light in nature's inmost shrine. 
Light within this soul of mine ! 
Leaning on the All-Father's breast 
In serene and tranquil rest ; 
Caring not the way to see 
While He gently leadeth me ; 
Fearing not the treacherous dark 
While to his dear voice I hark; 
Knowing if the way be dim 
I must closer cling to Him ; 
What I cannot understand 
Glad to leave in God's own hand, 
Sure that Fleaven is over all. 
And that He loves great and small ; 
Yielding the present to his will, 
For the future trusting still, — 
While beyond death's mystery 
The calm face of Christ I see, 
That dear face whose loving eyes 
Wept alone in sad surprise. 
From my heart the shadows roll, 
It is morning in my soul ! 



MA TV K IT V. 95 



MATURITY. 

Time was I mourned the vanished years, 
The glad and glorious days of youth, 

When Memory shed no bitter tears, 

And young Romance clasped hands with Truth. 

I sighed because the early flowers, 

Spring's first fair children, died so soon, 

And all the dewy morning hours 
Fled fast before the summer noon. 

I grieved that aught so very fair 

As Youth and May should be so fleet ; 

That Ijfe's first vintage, sweet and rare. 
But once the eager lip may meet. 

but standing with hushed heart to-day 
Where summer sunshine warmly glows, 

I sigh not for Spring's flowery way, 
Nor dread the autumn's rich repose. 

I would not, if I could, go back. 

Life's noon is better than its morn; 
Flower-wreathed and crowned, it does not lack 

One rose, nor find one added thorn. 

Go back? — To meet the strange unrest 
That fills the fiery heart of youth, — 

The longing sadness of the brca?t 
That cannot understand its ruth, — 



96 MA Tl'RITY. 

The doubts, the passionate despair, 
The uncertain step, the hidden fear, — 

The shadow of oncoming care 

Darker and colder than Avhen near, — 

The weary reaching after what 

The puny hands still fail to grasp, — 

The search for good, to find it not 

The thing we sought for in our clasp, — 

The dread of all the mysteries blent 
In that yet unread mystery, life, — 

The shrinking from the angels sent 
To guard us amid sin and strife, — 

Go back to meet all these? Ah, no! 

Life's summer sun illumes my way; 
No roses crowned the long ago 

More bright than those I wear to-day ! 

Some fleeting joys of youth are past; 

But past, too, are its trembling fears; 
It had some hopes too bright to last, 

Balanced alway by weight of tears. 

Now stilled is all the vague unrest, 
The eager longing of the spring; 

With Peace for its abiding guest, 
]My quiet heart can sit and sing. 

"What though the autumn days come next? 

They bring rich sheaves and ripened fruit, 
And at their step shall I be vext 

Even though the singing birds are mute? 



PEACE. 

God crowns all seasons with his gifts; 

Each in its turn the fairest seems; 
And many a heart to him uplifts, 

Whose real is dearer than its dreams. 



97 



PEACE. 



Ere our dear Saviour spoke the parting word 
To those who loved Him best when here below, 

While deep emotion every bosom stirred. 
He said, "My peace I give yon ere I go !" 

His Peace, sweet Peace ! As falls the summer dew 
On drooping flowers, so fell those words of cheer 

Upon the earnest hearts that dimly knew 

What they, like their dear Lord, must suffer here. 

His Peace — Christ's Peace ! O gift most rare and strange ! 

Never was aught so precious given before ! 
Vain triflcr he who would that gift exchange 

For all the riches of Golconda's shore! 

His Peace — His blessed Peace ! Not Joy, the bright, 
Bewildering sprite that charmed their early years, 

When with youth's roses crowned, and clad in light. 
Her radiant eyes had ne'er been dimmed by tears, — 

But Peace that walks with Patience, side by side. 
Bearing Heaven's seal upon her pure, calm face; 

Child of Submission, whatso'er betide, 

She wears the white robes of celestial grace. 
9 



98 



YESTERDAY AND TO-DAY. 



O Christ ! wliose human heart remembers still 
The pangs from which death only gave release, 

Strange griefs, strange fears, our yearning souls must fill, 
Withhold what else thou wilt — but give us Peace ! 



YESTERDAY AND TO-DA\^. 

But yesterday among us here. 

One with ourselves in hope and fear : 

Joying like us in little things. 

The sheen of gorgeous insect wings. 

The song of bird, the hum of bee. 

The white foam of the heaving sea. 

But yesterday your simplest speech, 

Your lightest breath, our hearts could reach ; 

Your very thoughts were ours. Our eyes 

Found in your own no mysteries. 

Your griefs, your joys, your prayers, Ave knew, 

The hopes that with your girlhood grew. 

But yesterday we dared to say, 

" 'Twere better you should walk this way 

Or that, dear child ! Do thus or so; 

Older and wiser we, you know." 

We gave you floAvers and curled your hair, 

And brought new robes for you to wear. 

To-day how far away thou art ! 
In all thy life we have no part. 



YESTERDA V AND TO-DA V. 

Hast thou a want? Wc know it not; 

Utterly parted from our lot, 

The veriest stranger is to thee 

All those who loved thee best can be. 

Deaf to our calls, our prayers, our cries, 
Thou dost not lift thy heavy eyes; 
Nor heed the tender words that flow 
From lips whose kisses thrilled thee so 
But yesterday ! To-day in vain 
We wait for kisses back again. 

To-day no awful mystery hid 
The dark and mazy past amid, 
Is half so great as this that lies 
Beneath the lids of tliy shut eyes. 
And in those frozen lips of stone, 
Impassive lips, that smile nor moan. 

But yesterday with loving care 

We petted, praised thee, called thee fair; 

To-day, oppressed with awe, we stand 

Before that ring-unfettered hand. 

And scarcely dare to lift one tress 

In mute and reverent caress. 

But yesterday with us. To-day 

Where thou art dwelling, who can say? 

In heaven? But where? Oh! for some spell 

To make thy tongue this secret tell ! 

To break the silence strange and deep, 

That thy sealed lips so closely keep ! 

In vain — in vain ! But yesterday 
So quick to answer and obey ; 



99 



DE PROFUNDIS. 

To-day, unmoved by word or tear, 
A creature of another sphere, 
Thou heedest us no more than they 
Who passed before the Flood away ! 



DE PROFUNDIS. 

Tossed by the heaving of passion's wild billows, 

Struggling with anguish and doubt and despair, 
Ere the dark waters close o'er him forever. 

Hearken, O God, to his agonized prayer! 
There is no star in the heavens above him, 

There is no rift in the dark rolling cloud; 
Only the thunder of storm-beaten surges, — 

Only the roar of the waves swelling loud ! 

Thou who art sitting serene in the heavens. 

Judging the ways that Earth's children have trod, 
Art thou unmoved by the cry of his anguish? 

Dost thou not hear it. Omnipotent God? 
Didst thou not fashion him out of the darkness. 

Moulding him even when hid in the womb? 
Not of his seeking the life that thou gavest. 

Burdened with sorrow and heavy with gloom ! 

Fettered by circumstance, place, and position. 
Tempted by foes from without and within, 

Wrestling with Evil, alone, single-handed. 
After long conflict he yielded to sin. 

O thou Immaculate ! Thou, the Unsinning ! 
Thou whose own being is spotless and pure. 



IN THE GARDEN. loi 

How from the heights of thy sinless perfection, 

Canst judge us with judgment, just, righteous, and sure? 

Ah I dare 1 question thee. Thou, the iVU-loving? 

Lo ! this tiie answer we find in thy Word : 
"Sitting serene on my throne in the heavens. 

Never one cry fioateth past me unheard ! 
(J ye disconsolate, heartsick, and erring, 

Tempted and languishing, lost and undone, 
How can ye question the love that I bear ye 

When out of its fullness I gave ye my Son?" 

Thou who didst wander in lone wildernesses ! 

Thou who didst suffer all pain and all loss ! 
Thou who didst moan in Gethsemane's garden! 

Thou who didst hang on the terrible cross ! 
Thou who wert tempted as never another, — 

Thou who wert man but yet sinless and pure, — 
Out of the depths do we lift up our voices, 

Only in Thee find we strength to endure ! 



IN THE GARDEN. 

Come out in the garden, children, 

Before the sun goes down. 
While yet the purple glory 

Brightens the far-off town : 
While yet the rosy vapor 

Bathes all the mountains round ; 
And list to the mystic music 

That rises from the ground. 
9* 



IN THE GARDEN. 

It is early, early springtime ; 

In slumber calm and deep 
The violet and the heliotrope, 

The rose and lily sleep. 
But as little children whisper 

And smile ere they awake, 
So now their low, sweet voices 

The winter silence break. 

A soft and thrilling murmur 

The listening spirit hears, 
Too faint and too ethereal 

To reach our fleshly ears. 
It tells of restless yearnings. 

Of throbbing, struggling life, 
Of eager, upward aimings. 

Of glad, rejoicing strife. 

They are not dumb and lifeless! 

Far down beneath the sod, 
With new-born joy exultant, 

They hear the voice of God ! 
And they stretch their glad arms upward. 

Impatient for the day, 
When the blessed golden sunlight 

Upon their brows shall play. 

And I dare to dream they love me, — 

That, as I inly pine 
For the blessing of their presence, 

Even so do they for mine. 
O my buried ones, my darlings! 

When ye hear my step and voice, 
In the darkness of your prison-cells, 

I know that ye rejoice ! 



THE HUMMING-BIRD. 

Haste ! haste ! I bend above ye 

With yearning love and trust, 
Whose warmth must reach ye as ye lie 

Far down beneath the dust. 
Shake off your clay-cold cerements ! 

The resurrection morn 
Has dawned upon the mountains, 

And a new world is born ! 



THE HUMMING-BIRD. 

Humming o'er the flowers 

All the summer day. 
Poised on unseen winglets 

A moment, — then away ! 
Swifter than an arrow 

Darting from the bow. 
Little jeweled wonder. 

Thou dost come and go ! 

Nesting, nesting, nesting. 

Where, 'mid clustering leaves, 
Web of shade and sunshine 

Summer deftly weaves; 
Sitting, sitting, sitting 

In your downy nest, — 
Is it labor, birdie, 

Or serenest rest? 

Brooding, brooding, broo ling 
O'er two tiny pearls, 



I04 A SONG FOR TWO. 

Pure as those that shimmered 
In Queen Esther's curls ! 

Wilt thou wonder, birdie, 
When they pass away? 

Tell me, which is dearer, 
Pearls, or life, to-day? 

Hast thou learned the lesson 

That we learn in pain. 
How joy comes of sorrow, 

And of losses, gain? 
Ah ! I question vainly, 

As, darting to and fro, 
Again, thou jeweled wonder, 

Thou dost come and go ! 



A SONG FOR TWO. 

Not for its sunsets burning clear and low. 
Its jDurple splendors on the eastern hills. 

Bless I the Year that now makes haste to go 
While sad Earth listens for its dying thrills. 

Not that its days were sweet with sun and showers j 
Its summer nights all luminous with stars: 

Not that its vales were studded thick with flowers; 
Not that its mountains pierced the azure bars ; 

Not that from our dear land, by slow degrees, 
Some mists of error it hath blown away; 

Not for its noble deeds — ah I not for these — 
Fair would I twine this wreath of song to-day. 



ONCE ! 



105 



But for one gift that it has brought to me 

My grateful heart would crown the dying Year; 

Because, O best-beloved, it gave me thee, 
I drop this garland on the passing bier ! 



ONCE! 



Once in your sight, 
As May buds swell in the sun's warm light, 

So grew her soul, 
Yielding itself to your sweet control. 

Once if you spoke. 
Echoing strains in her heart awoke, 

Sending a thrill 
All through its chambers sweet and still. 

Once if you said, 
"Sweet, with Love's garland I crown your head," 

Ah ! how the rose 
Flooded her forehead's pale repose! 

Once if your lip 
Dared the pure sweetness of hers to sip. 

Softly and meek 
Dark lashes drooped on a white rose cheek ! 

Once if your name 
Some one but whispered, a sudden flame 

Burned on her cheek. 
Telling a story she would not speak ! 



I06 ONCE! 

Once, — ah ! I sin, 
Raising the ghost of what once has been ! 

Yet list, I pray, 
To one plain truth that I speak to-day. 

You do but wait 
At a sepulchre's sealed gate ! 

Her love is dead, 
Bound hand and foot in its narrow bed. 

Why did it die? 
Ask of your soul the reason why ! 

Question it well. 
And surely the secret it will tell. 

But if your heart 
Ever again plays the lover's part, 

Let this truth be 
Blent with the, solemn mystery : 

Pure flame aspires; 
Downward flow not the altar fires; 

And skylarks soar 
Up where the earth mists vex no more. 

Now loose your hold 
From her white garment's spotless fold; 

And let her pass, — 
While both hearts murmur, "Alas! alas!" 



117/ AT I LOST. 



WHAT I LOST. 

Wandering in the dewy twilight 

Of a golden summer day, 
When the mists upon the mountains 

Flushed with purple splendor lay: 
When the sun just kissed the hilltops 

And the vales Avere hushed and dim, 
And from out the forest arches 

Rose a holy vesper hymn, — 
I lost something. Have you seen it, 

Children, ye who passed that way? 
Did you chance to find the treasure 

That I lost that summer day? 

It was neither gold nor silver. 

Orient pearl nor jewel rare ; 
Neither amethyst, nor ruby. 

Nor an opal gleaming fair; 
'Twas no curious, quaint mosaic 

Wrought by cunning master-hands, 
Nor a cameo where Hebe 

Crowned with deathless beauty stands. 
Yet have I lost something precious ; 

Children, ye who passed that way, — 
Tell me, have you found the treasure 

That I lost one summer day? 

Then, you say, it was a casket 
Filled with India's perfumes rare, 

Or a tiny flask of crystal 

Meet the rose's breath to bear; 



107 



Io8 THE CHIMNE Y SWALLO W. 

Or a bird of wondrous plumage, 

With a voice of sweetest tone, 
That escaping from my bosom 

To the greenwood deep has flown. 
Ah! not these, I answer vainly; 

•Children, ye who passed that way. 
Ye can never find the treasure 

That I lost that summer day ! 

You may call it bird or blossom ; 

Name my treasure what you will ; 
Here no more its song or fragrance 

Shall my soul with rapture fill. 
But, thank God ! our earthly losses 

In no darksome void are cast; 
Safely garnered, some to-morrow 

Shall restore them all at last. 
Somewhere in the great hereafter, 

Children, ye who pass this way, 
I shall find again the treasure 

That I lost one summer day ! 



THE CHIMNEY SWALLOW. 

One night as I sat by my table. 

Tired of books and pen, 
With wandering thoughts far straying 

Out into the world of men ; — 
That world where the busy workers 

Such magical deeds are doing. 
Each one with a steady purpose 

His own pet plans pursuing ; 



THE CIIIMNE Y S WALL O IV. 1 09 

Wlien the house was wrapt in silence, 

And the children were all asleep, 
And even the mouse in the wainscot 

Had ceased to run and leap. 
All at once from the open chimney 

Came a hum and a rustle and whirring, 
That startled me out of my dreaming, 

And set my pulses stirring. 

^Vhat was it? I paused and listened; 

The roses were all in bloom, 
And in from the garden floated 

The violet's rich perfume. 
So it could not be Kriss Kringle, 

For he only comes, you know, 
AVHien the Christmas bells are chiming, 

And the hills are white with snow. 

Hark ! a sound as of rushing Avaters, 

Or the rustle of falling leaves. 
Or the patter of eager raindrops 

Yonder among the eaves ! 
Then out from the dark, old chimney. 

Blackened with soot and smoke, 
With a whir of fluttering pinions 

A startled birdling broke, — 

Da-shing against the window; 

'Lighting a moment where 
My sculptured Angel folded 

Its soft white wings in prayer; 
Swinging upon the curtains; 

Perched on the ivy-vine; 
At last it rested trembling 

In tender hands of mine. 



CATHARINE. 

No stain upon its plumage; 

No dust upon its wings; 
Ah, happy bird ! thus dwelling 

Unsoiled 'mid foulest things. 
But happier thou, O soul of mine ! 

When thou at last shalt soar, 
Where earthly soil and sorrow 

Shall vex thee nevermore 1 



CATHARINE. 



O WONDROUS mystery of death ! 

I yield me to thine awful sway, 
And with hushed heart and bated breath 

Bow down before thy shrine to-day ! 

But yesterday these pallid lips 

Breathed reverently my humble name; 
These eyes now closed in drear eclipse 

Brightened with gratitude's soft flame. 

These poor, pale hands were swift to do 
The lowliest service I might ask; 

These palsied feet the long day through 
Moved gladly to each wonted task. 

O faithful, patient, loving one. 

Who from earth's great ones shrank afar, 
Canst bear the presence of The Son, 

And dwell where holy angels are? 



HEIR SHIP. 

Dost thou not meekly bow thine head, 
And stand apart with humblest mien, 

Nor dare with softest step to tread 
'I'he ranks of shining Ones between? 

Dost thou not kneel with downcast eyes 
The hem of some white robe to touch. 

While on thine own meek forehead lies 
The crown of her who "loved much." 

O vain imaginings ! To-day 

Earth's loftiest prince is not thy peer. 
Come, Sage and Seer ! mute homage pay 

To this Pale Wonder lying here ! 



HEIRSHIP. 



Little store of wealth have I; 

Not a rood of land I own ; 
Nor a mansion fair and high 

Built with towers of fretted stone. 
Stocks nor bonds, nor title-deeds. 

Flocks nor herds have I to show; 
When I ride, no Arab steeds 

Toss for me their manes of snow, 

I have neither pearls nor gold, 
Massive plate, nor jewels rare; 

Broidered silks of worth untold. 
Nor rich robes a queen might wear 



HEIRSHIP. 

In my garden's narrow bound 
Flaunt no costly tropic bloonxs, 

Ladening all the air around 

With a weight of rare perfumes. 

Yet to an immense estate 

Am I heir, by grace of God, — 
Richer, grander than doth wait 

Any earthly monarch's nod. 
Heir of all the Ages, I — 

Heir of all that they have wrouglit, 
All their store of emprise high. 

All their wealth of precious thought. 

Every golden deed of theirs 

Sheds its lustre on my way ; 
All their labors all their prayers, 

Sanctify this present day ! 
Heir of all that they have earned 

By their passion and their tears, — 
Heirof all that they have learned 

Through the weary, toiling years ! 

Heir of all the faith sublime 

On whose wings they soared to heaven ; 
Heir of every hope that Time 

To Earth's fainting sons hath given ! 
Aspirations pure and high, — 

Strength to dare and to endure, — 
Heir of all the Ages, I — 

Lo ! I am no longer poor ! 



ACNES. 



113 



AGNES. 

Agnes! Agnes! is it thus 
Thou, at last, dost come to us? 
From the land of balm and bloom, 
Blandest airs and sweet perfume. 
Where the jasmine's golden stars 
Glimmer soft through emerald bars. 
And the fragrant orange flowers 
Fall to earth in silver showers, 

Agnes! Agnes! 
\Y\\.\\ thy pale hands on thy breast, 
Comest thou here to take thy rest? 

Agnes! Agnes! o'er thy grave 
Loud the winter winds will rave, 
And the snow fall fast around, 
Heaping high thy burial mound ; 
Yet, within its soft embrace. 
Thy dear form and earnest face. 
Wrapt away from burning pain. 
Ne'er shall know one pang again. 

Agnes ! Agnes ! 
Nevermore shall anguish vex thee, 
Nevermore shall care perplex thee. 

Agnes! Agnes! wait, ah! wait 
Just one moment at the gate. 
Ere your pure feet enter in, 
Where is neitlier pain nor sin. 



114 AGNES. 



Thou art blest, but how shall we 
Bear the pang of losing thee? 
Thou art safe, but round us roll 
Billows which o'erwhelm the soul. 

Agnes ! Agnes ! 
What if we should lose our way 
In the darkness where we stray? 

Agnes ! Agnes ! turn thine ear 
From the anthems swelling clear; 
Passing sweet are they we know, 
While our words are weak and low; 
But we love thee ! ah ! how well 
Angel tongue could never tell ; 
List ! we love thee ! By that word 
Once thy heart of hearts was stirred. 

Agnes ! Agnes ! 

By that love we bid thee wait 

' Just one moment at the gate ! 

Agnes ! Agnes ! No ! Pass on 
To the heaven that thou hast won ! 
By thy life of brave endeavor, 
Up the heights aspiring ever, 
Whence thy voice, like clarion clear, 
Rang out words of lofty cheer, — 
By thy laboring not in vain. 
By thy martyrdom of pain, 

Our Saint Agnes — 
From our yearning sight pass on 
To the Rest that thou hast won ! 



MY MOCKING-BIRD. 115 



MY MOCKING-BIRD. 

Mocking-bird ! mocking-bird ! swinging high 
" Aloft in your gilded cage, 
The clouds are hurrying over the sky, 

The wild winds fiercely rage. 
But soft and warm is the air you breathe 
Up there with the tremulous ivy wreatli : 
And never an icy blast can chill 
The perfumed silence sweet and still. 

Mocking-bird ! mocking-bird ! from your throat 

Breaks forth no flood of song, 
Nor even a perfect golden note. 

Triumphant, glad and strong ! 
But now and then a pitiful wail, 
Like the plaintive sigh of the dying gale, 
Comes from that arching breast of thine 
Swinging up there with the ivy-vine. 

Mocking-bird ! mocking-bird ! well I know 

Your heart is far away. 
Where the golden stars of the jasmine glow, 

And the roses bloom alway ! 
For your cradle-nest was softly made 
In the depth of a blossoming myrtle's shade; 
And you heard the chant of the southern seas 
Borne inland by the favoring breeze. 

But, ah, my beautiful mocking-bird! 
Should I bear you back again, 



1 1 6 MV MOCKING-BIRD. 

Never would song of yours be heard 

Echoing through the glen. 
For once, ah ! once at the dawn of day, 
You waked to the roar of the deadly fray. 
When the terrible clash of armed foes 
Startled the vale from its dim repose. 

At first you sat on a swaying bough, 

Mocking the bugle's blare, 
Fearless and free in the fervid glow 

Of the heated, sulphurous air. 
Your voice rang out like a trumpet's note, 
With a martial ring in its upward float, 
And stern men smiled, for you seemed to be 
* Cheering them on to victory ! 

But at length, as the awful day wore on, 

You flew to a tree-top high, 
And sat like a spectre grim and wan, 

Outlined against the sky; 
Sat silently watching the fiery fray 
Till, heaps upon heaps, the Blue and Gray 
Lay together, a silent band. 
Whose souls had passed to the shadowy land. 

Ah, my mocking-bird ! swinging there 

Under the ivy-vine, 
You still remember the bugle's blare. 

And the blood poured forth like wine. 
The soul of song in your gentle breast 
Died in that hour of fierce unrest. 
When like a spectre grim and wan, 
You watched to see how the strife went on. 



UNDER rilE PALM-TREES. 



117 



UNDER THE PALM-TREES. 

Wr were children together, you and I, 

We trod the same paths in days of old ; 
Together we watched the sunset sky, 

And counted its bars of massive gold. 
And when from the dark horizon's brim 
The moon stole up with its silver rim. 
And slowly sailed through the fields of air, 
^Ve thought there was nothing on earth so fair. 

You walk to-night where the jasmines grow, 

And the Cross looks down from the tropic skies; 
Where the spicy breezes softly blow, 

And the slender shafts of the palm-trees rise. 
Vou breathe the breath of the orange flowers. 
And the perfumed air of the myrtle bowers; 
You pluck the acacia's golden balls. 
And mark where the red pomegranate falls. 

I stand to-night on the breezy hill, 

Wliere the pine-trees sing as they sang of yore; 
The north star burneth clear and still. 

And the moonbeams silver your father's door. 
I can see the hound as he lies asleep, 
In the shadow close by the old well-sweep, 
And hear the river's murmuring flow. 
As we two heard it long ago. 



Ii8 HYMN. 

Do you think of the firs on the mountain-side, 

As you walk to-night where the palm-trees grow? 
Of the brook where the trout in the darkness hide? 

Of the yellow willows waving slow? 
Do you long to drink of the crystal spring, 
In the dell where the purple harebells swing? 
Would your pulses leap could you hear once more 
The sound of the flail on the threshing-floor? 

Ah ! the years are long, and the world is wide. 

And the salt sea rolls our hearts between ; 
And never again at eventide 

Shall we two gaze on the same fair scene. 
But under the palm-trees wandering slow, 
You think of the spreading elms I know ; 
And you deem our daisies fairer far 
Than the gorgeous blooms of the tropics are ! 



HYMN. 



FOR AN INSTALLATION. 



Sing aloud, O happy voices ! 

Fill the air with joyful praise, 
While each grateful heart rejoices 

In the gift that crowns our days ! 

Sing for joy ! But let your singing 
To the heights of prayer upreach. 

To thy throne, O God! are winging 
Thoughts too vast for human speech. 



hymn: 

Vet for him whom thou hast sent us, 
^ Now, with yearning hearts, we pray; 
Keep the treasure thou hast lent us. 
Father, near to thee alway ! 

When his heart grows faint and weary, 
Strengthen him with heavenly wine ; 

If his path grows dark or dreary. 
Lighten it with light divine. 

When the spirit, Lord, is willing, 
Though the shrinking flesh is weak. 

Let thy voice, all tempests stilling, 
Blessed words of comfort speak. 

When he kneels beside our dying,— 
^^'hen he lays our dead away,— 

In our anguish and our crying. 

Teach thou him what words to say. 

When before thy holy altar 
He shall pour the sacred Avine, 

Let his strong hand never falter. 
Holding fast to hand of thine. 

Now on pastor and on people, 
Lord, thy fullest blessing pour. 

While the bell from out the steeple 
Rings in peace for evermore ! 



119 



120 WEARINESS. 



WEARINESS. 

I AM weary, — 

Give me rest ! 
Long tlie way seems, dark and dreary, 

It were best 
If beneath the sod low lying 

Fast asleep, 
Nevermore might Earth's sad sighing 
Rouse me from my slumber deep ! 

I am tired ! 

Once my feet 
Up the mountain heights aspired 

Light and fleet ! 
Now, alas ! they feebly falter 

On the road, 
And my weak arms to the altar 
Bear no sacrificial load ! 

For life's fever 

Bring me balm ! 
Wrap my senses, O Rest-Giver, 

In thy calm ! 
Downy soft shall be my pillow 

When at last 
Far across Death's heaving billow 
I shall smile at conflicts past ! 



ODE. 



ODE 

FOR THE DEDICATION OF A MUSIC-HALL. 

No grand Cathedral's vaulted space 

Where, through the "dim, religious light,' 

Gleam pictured saint and cross and crown, 
We consecrate with song to-night ; 

No stately temple lifting high 
Its dome against the starlit skies, 

Wliere lofty arch and glittering spire 
Lfke miracles of beauty rise. 

Yet here beneath this humbler roof 

Witli reverent hearts and lips we come; 

Hail, Music ! Song and Beauty, hail ! 

Henceforth be these poor walls your home. 

Here speak to hearts that long have yearned 
Your presence and your spells to know ; 

Here touch the lips athirst to drink 
Where your perennial fountains flow. 

Here where our glorious mountain-peaks 

Sublimely pierce the ether blue. 
Lift ye our souls, and bid them rise 

In aspirations grand and true ! 
II 



122 ''LORD, SAVE OR I PERIS HP 

O Music, Art, and Science, hail ! 

We greet you now with glad acclaims ; 
Ye bay-crowned ones ! the listening air 
-II Waits to re-echo with your names; 

Waits for your voices ringing clear 
Above this weary, work-day world ; 

Waits till ye bid fair Truth arise. 

While Error from her throne is hurled ! 



"LORD, SAVE OR I PERISH." 

The storm is loud, and wild the night; 
O'erwhelmed with horror and affright, 
While fierce winds toss my fragile bark, 
I cry out through the lonesome dark, 
" Save, Lord, or I perish !" 

A sailor on an unknown sea. 
No human skill can pilot me ; 
Unless Thou art my guiding star, 
How can I reach the shore afar? 

"Save, Lord, or I perish !" 

Thou who didst trembling Peter save, 
What time he dared the treacherous wave ; 
Thou who didst bid the dead arise. 
Thou who didst open sealed eyes, 
' ' Save me, or I perish ! ' ' 



NEVER AGAIN. 

When in the wilderness 1 stray, 
To fierce temptation's power a prey, 
Or on the mountain-top alone, 
With pallid lips make bitter moan, 
"Save, Lord, or I perish!" 

When worn by sorrow, pain, and loss, 
I sink beneath some heavy cross. 
And faltering in my dumb despair 
Find help nor succor otherwhere, 
" Save, Thou, or I perish !" 

When dragons that I cannot slay. 
Confront me hourly in the way; 
When cares and doubts and fears oppress, 
And Reason mocks at my distress, 
"Save, Lord, or I perish !" 

And when I reach the river's brim, 
That threads the valley dark and dim, 
To thee, O Christ, I'll lift mine eye. 
And till my breath shall fail me, cry, 
"Lord, save or I perish!" 



123 



NEVER AGAIN. 

Never again — oh ! nevermore 
Until we meet on the other shore ! 

Never again ! for us two between 
Lies an impassable gulf I ween. 



124 



NEVER AGAIN. 

It is broad and deep ; no voice can come 
Over its darkness cold and dumb ; 

Nor sign nor token may ever pass 
Across its desolate void — alas ! — 

To bear one thought from thee to me ; 
Henceforth we are parted, utterly ! 

Sometimes I wish that thou wert dead ; 
Then, as pilgrims bow their tears to shed 

And their prayers to breathe at a prophet's shrine, 
I could kneel at thy grave and offer mine ! 

For thou wert prophet and priest to me. 
Pointing me where the Good might be; 

Helping my weakness with thy strength, 



And then, with a firm and a steady hand, 
Leading me on towards the Promised Land. 

Whether a thought thou dost ever cast 
Back to our beautiful, memoried past, 

I never may know, until our souls 
Meet where Eternity's broad sea rolls. 

It well may be that thy busy brain 
Recks little of memory's joy or pain. 

One of the world's wise workers thou, 
Its seal of care is upon thy brow. 



THE NAME. 

'I'hou hast words to speak with lip and pen, 
Of import vast to thy fcUow-men; 

And the current of life is swift and strong 
That bears thee on with a mighty throng. 

Hut T, with the one I love best near, 
And my children's voices in my ear, 

Oft think with a pang of bitterest pain 
Of days that may never return again ! 



125 



THE NAME. 



I KNOW not by what name to call thee, thou 

Who reignest supreme, sole sovereign of my heart ! 
Thou who the lode-star of my being art. 

Thou before whom my soul delights to bow ! 

What shall I call thee ? Teach me some dear name 
Better than all the rest, that I may pour 
All that the years have taught me of Love's lore 

In one fond word. " Lover?" But that's too tame, 

And "Friend" 's too cold, though thou art both to me. 
Art thou my King ? Kings sit enthroned afar, 
And crowns less meet for love than reverence are, 

While both my heart gives joyfully to thee. 
Art thou — but, ah ! I'll cease the idle quest, 
I cannot tell what name befits thee best ! 



126 CHRISTMAS, 1863. 



LIFE. 



There was a time when low on bended knee 
With outstretched hand and wet, uplifted eye, 
I cried, '•' O Father ! teach me how to die, 
And give me strength Death's awful face to see 
And not to fear." Henceforth my prayer shall be, 
" Help me to live." Stern Life stalks slowly by, 
Relentless and inexorable. No cry 
For help or pity moveth her, as she 
Gives to each one the burden of the day, 

Nor heeds the limbs that bend beneath their load. 
We may not shrink from our appointed way 
Nor pause to rest, however rough the road 
She bids us walk in. Therefore let us pray, 
" Give us the strength we need to live, O God !" 



CHRISTMAS, 1863. 

Jesus, on this thy blessed natal day. 
My home wears not its wonted fair array; 
Nor star, nor cross, upon its walls are seen. 
Nor wreath, nor garland, of the freshest green. 

No merry, childish voices make it ring 
With joyful shouts of Christmas welcoming ; 
Nor softly whisper, as they pause from play, 
"Mother, was Jesus truly born this day?" 



CENTENNIAL POEM. 

l^ut not the less turns my full heart to Thee; 
To-day, O Christ, a present helper be ; 
As near in sorrow as in joy be Thou, 
Accept the tribute that I bring Thee now. 

And not the less would I on this glad day, 
Low at thy feet my grateful homage pay ; 

Babe of Bethlehem, I pause to hear 
The angel voices chiming sweet and clear. 

1 lift my eyes to seek the wondrous star 
That led the wise men from their home afar; 
I bend with them in humblest awe to see 
The Kingly One who sat on Mary's knee! 

The lowly, meek, yet royal One, who bore 
The burden of the Cross till life was o'er. 
O Christ, our King, half mortal, all divine. 
Who e'er can comprehend such love as thine? 



127 



CENTENNIAL POEM. 

Written for the One Hundredth Anniversary of the Settlement of Mid- 
dlebury, Vermont. 

July, 1866. 

O Mighty Present ! from our souls to-day 
Unloose thy grasp a little while, we pray; — 
Nor frown that now upon another's shrine 
We lay the votive wreaths so lately thine. 



128 CENTENNIAL POEM. 

We are not fickle, though it is not long 

Since with glad harmony, triumphant song 

And waving banners, the exulting throng 

Proclaimed thee monarch — crowned thee kingliest 

king- 
Lord of the ages — mightiest and best 
Of the dead years that in their pallid rest 
Sleep undisturbed, though loud our plaudits ring ! 
We are not fickle. Grand, heroic, true. 
Faithful and brave thine earnest work to do, 
O glorious Present ! we rejoice in thee. 
Thou noble nurse of great deeds yet to be ! 
Hast thou not shown us that our mother Earth 
Still, in exultant joy, gives heroes birth? 
Do not the old romances that our youth 
Revered and honored as the truest truth. 
Grow pale and dim before the facts sublime 
Thy pen has written on the scroll of Time? 

Ah! never yet did poet's tongue, 

Though like a silver bell it rung, 

Or minstrel, o'er his sounding lyre 

Breathing the old, prophetic fire, 

Or harper, in the storied walls 

Of Scotia's proud, baronial halls — 

Where mail-clad men with sword and spear. 

Waited entranced the song to hear, 

That through the stormy midnight hour. 

Fast held them in its spell of power, — 

Ah ! never yet did they rehearse 

In flowing rhyme, or stately verse. 

The praise of deeds more nobly done. 

Or tell of fields more grandly won ! 
We laud thee, we praise thee, we bless thee to-day ! 
At thy feet, lowly bending, glad homage we pay! 



CENTENNIAL POEM. 



129 



Thou hast taught us that men are as brave as of yore ; 

That the day of great deeds and great thought is not o'er; 

That tlie courage undaunted, the far-reaching faith, 

The strength that unshaken looks cahnly on death, 

The self-abnegation that hastens to lay 

Its all on the altar, have not passed away. 

Thou hast taught us that "country" is more than a name; 

That honor unsullied is better than fame; 

Thou hast proved that while man can still battle for truth, 

Even boyhood can give up the promise of youth, 

And yielding its life with a smile and a sigh, 

Say, "'Tis sweet for my God and my country to die." 

O heart-searching Present, thy sons have gone down 

To the night of the grave in their day of renown ! 

Thy daughters have watched by the hearthstone in vain. 

For the loved and the lost that returned not again. 

No Spartans were they,— yet 'mid tears falling fast, 

Their foith and their patience endured to the last; 

And God gave them strength to their kindred to say, 

"Go ye forth to the fight, while we labor and pray!" 

Thou hast opened thy coffers on land and on sea; 

And broad-handed Charity, noble and free, 

Has lavished thy bounties on friend and on foe, 

Like the rain that descending, falls softly and slow 

On the just and the unjust, and never may know 

The one from the other. When thy story is told 

By some age that looks backward and calls thee "the 

old," 
It shall puzzle its sages, all great as thou art. 
To tell which was greatest, thy head or thy heart ! 

Mighty words thy lips have spoken, — 

Strongest fetters thou hast broken, — 

And in tones like those of thunder. 

When the clouds are rent asund^. 



130 CENTENNIAL POEM. 

Thou hast made the Nations hear thee, — 
Thou hast bade the Tyrants fear thee, — 
And our hearts to-day proclaim thee. 

As they oft have done before, 
Fit to lead the glorious legions 

Of the glorious days of yore ! 
Yet still, we pray thee, veil awhile 

Thy splendor from our dazzled eyes 
And hide the glory of thy smile, 

Lest our souls wake to new surprise ! 
Bear with us while our feet to-day 
Retrace a dim and shadowy way, 
In search of what, it well may be. 
Shall help to make us Avorthier thee ! 



And now, O spirit of the Past, draw near, 

And let us feel thy blessed presence here ! 

With reverent hearts and voices hushed and low. 

We wait to hear thy garments' rustling flow ! 

From all the conflicts of our busy life, 

From all its bitter and enduring strife, 

Its eager yearnings and its wild turmoil. 

Its cares, its joys, its sorrows, and its toil. 

Its aspirations that too often seem 

Like the remembered phantoms of a dream. 

We turn aside. This hour is thine alone. 

And none shall share the grandeur of thy throne. 

Ah ! thou art here ! Beneath these whispering trees. 

Thy breath floats softly on the passing breeze; 

We feel the presence that we cannot see. 

And every moment draws us nearer thee. 

Could we but see thee, with thy solemn eyes 

In whose rare depths such wondrous meaning lies, — 



CENTENXr.iL POEM. 



131 



Thy dark robes sweeping this enchanted ground, — 
Thy midnight hair with purple pansies crowned, — 
Thy lip so sadly sweet, thy brow serene! 
There is no expectation in thy mien, 
For thou hast done with dreams. Nor joy nor pain 
Can e'er disturb thy placid calm again. 
What is this veil that hides thee from our sight? 
Breathe it away, thou spirit darkly bright ! 
It may not be ! Our eyes are dim, 

Perhaps Avith age, perhaps with tears; 
We hear no more the choral hymn 

The angels sing among the spheres. 
Weary and worn and tempest-tossed. 
Much have we gained — and something lost — 
Since in the sunbeams golden glow, 
The rippling brooklet's silvery flow, 
The song of bird or murmuring bee. 
The fragrant flower, the stately tree, 
The royal pomp of sunset skies, 
And all earth's varied harmonies. 
We saw and heard what nevermore 
Can Earth or Heaven to us restore. 
And felt a child's unquestioning faith 
In childhood's mystic lore! 



A hundred times the Summer's fragrant blooms 
Have laden all the air with sweet perfumes, — 
A hundred times along the mountain-side. 
Autumn has flung his crimson banners wide, — 
A hundred times has kindly Winter spread 
His snowy mantle o'er the violet's bed, — 
A hundred times has Earth rejoiced to hear 
The Spring's light footsteps in the forest sere, 



132 



CENTENNIAL POEM. 



Since on yon grassy knoll the quick, sharp stroke 

Of the young woodman's axe the silence broke. 

Not then did these encircling hills look down 

On quaint old farmhouse, or on steepled town. 

No church-spires pointed to the arching skies; 

No wandering lovers saw the moon arise; 

No childish laughter mingled with the song 

Of the fair Otter,, as it flowed along 

As brightly then as now. Ah ! little recked 

I'he joyous river, when the sunshine flecked 

Its dancing wavelets, that no human eye 

Gave it glad welcome as it frolicked by! 

The long, uncounted years had come and flown. 

And it had still swept on, unseen, unknown, 

Biding its time. No minstrel sang its praise, 

No poet named it in immortal lays. 

It played no part in legendary lore, 

And young Romance knew not its winding shore. 

But in her own loveliness Nature is glad, 

And little slie cares for man's smile or his frown; 
In the robes of her royalty still she is clad. 

Though his eye may behold not her sceptre or crown ! 
And over our beautiful Otter the trees 
Swayed lightly as now in the frolicsome breeze; 
And the meek little violet lifted an eye. 
As blue as its own, to the laughing blue sky. 

The harebell trembled on its stem 

Down where the rushing waters gleam, 

A sapphire on the broidered hem 
Of some fair Naiad of the stream. 

The buttercups, bright-eyed and bold, 

Held up their chalices of gold 

To catch the sunshine and the dew, 

Gayly as those that bloom for you. 



CENTENNIAL POEM. 

And deep within the forest shade, 

Where broadest noon mere twilight made, 

Ten thousand small, sweet censers swung, 

And tiny bells by Zephyrs rung, 

Made tinkling music till the day 

In solemn splendor died away. 

The woods were full of praise and prayer. 

Although no human tongue was there; 

For every pine and hemlock sung 

The grand cathedral aisles among, 

And every flower that gemmed the sod 

Looked up and whispered, "Thou art God. 

The birds sung as they sing to-day, 

A song of love and joy alway. 

The brown thrush from its golden throat 

Poured out its long, melodious note; 

The pigeons cooed ; the veery threw 

Its mellow trill from spray to spray; 

The wild night-hawk its trumpet blew, 

And the owl cried, "tu whit, tu whoo," 

From set of sun to break of day. 

The partridge reared her fearless brood 

Safe in the darkling solitude. 

And the bald eagle built its nest 

High on the tall cliff's craggy crest. 

And often, when the still moonlight 

Made all the lonely valley bright, 

Down from the hills its thirst to slake. 

The deer trod softly through the brake ; 

While far away the spotted fawn 

Waited the coming of the dawn, 

And trembled when the panther's scream 

Startled it from a troubled dream. 

12 



^17> 



134 CENTENNIAL POEM. 

The black bear roamed the forest wide ; 

The fierce wolf tracked the mountain-side ; 

The wild cat's silent, stealthy tread 

Was, even there, a fear and dread ; 

The red fox barked, — a strange, weird sound, 

That woke the slumbering echoes round ; 

And the burrowing mink and otter hid 

In their holes the tangled roots amid-. 

Lords of their limitless domain, 

Of hill and dale, of mount and plain. 

The wild things dreamed not of the hour 

When they should own their Master's power. 

But he came at last ! With a sturdy hand. 
And a voice of deep and stern command, 
And an eye that looked upon friend and foe 
With the spell of strength in its kindling glow; 
With a stately presence, a mien that told 
That his heart was as true as it was bold, 
He came to his own, and proclaimed his sway. 
And the forest fled from his glance away I 
The rightful heir of the regions round. 
No golden circlet his forehead crowned. 
But he wore his youth with a kingly grace. 
As he proudly stepped to his destined place. 
Never a royal couch had he. 
But he made his bed 'neath a greenwood tree, 
And a simple garb of homespun brown 
Round the brave young limbs was folded down. 
Blithely the days and the years sped on ; 
The meed of his toil at length was won — 
A home in the wilderness, fair and sweet. 
Where the hill and the winding river meet. 
Ah ! blest was he, when the silent stars, 
Peering from out their cloudy bars. 



CENTENNIAL POEM. 135 

Looked down on the lowly cot that stood 

Deep in the virgin solitude ; 

And saw the cabin windows gleam 

In the pleasant hearthfire's ruddy beam, 

While the children laughed, and the mother sang 

Till the walls with the merry music rang! 

A hundred years ! A century of change — 
A century of progress vast and strange ! 
Ah ! could the dust that under yonder sod 
In patient hope awaits the voice of God, 
Wearing the hues of ruddy life again 
Come forth to mingle with its fellow-men, 
How would the earnest, thoughtful, questioning eyes 
Find marvels everywhere ! In earth and skies ; 
On the broad seas, and where the prairies pour 
Their overflowing wealth from shore to shore ;m 
Where the Black Horses, with their eyes of fire, 
Scale the high mountains, panting with desire. 
Or thundering down the valleys, onward sweep 
With long, persistent strides from steep to steep ; 
Or where the lightning hastes, with eager thrill, 
To do man's bidding, and perform his will. 

Yet could our voices reach the slumbering dead 
Who rest so calmly in yon grass-grown bed, 
TJiis truth would seem with greatest wonder fraught, — 
TJiat they are heroes to our eyes and thought. 
For they were men who never dreamed of fame : 
They did not toil to make themselves a name : 
They little fancied that when years had passed. 
And the long century had died at last. 
Another age should make their graves a shrine, 
And humble chaplets for their memory twine. 



136 



CENTENNIAL POEM. 



They simply strove, as other men may strive, 
Full, earnest lives in sober strength to live ; 
They did the duty nearest to their hand; 
Subdued wild nature as at God's command; 
Laid the broad acres open to the sun. 
And made fair homes in forests dark and dun ; 
Built churches, founded schools, established laws, 
Kindly and just and true to freedom's cause; 
Resisted wrong, and with stout hands and hearts, 
In war, as well as peace, played well their parts. 
Their men were brave; their women pure and true; 
Their sons ashamed no honest work to do ; 
And while they dreamed no dreams of being great, 
They did great deeds, and conquered hostile Fate. 
We laud them, we praise them, we bless them to-day ; 
At their graves, as their right, tearful homage we pay ! 
And the laurel-crowned Present comes humbly at last. 
And bends by our side at the shrine of the Past. 
With the hands that such burdens unshrinking have borne, 
From the brow weary cares have so furrowed and worn, 
She takes off the chaplet, and lays it with tears, 
That she cares not to hide, at the feet of the Years. 
Hark ! a breath of faint music, a murmur of song ! 
A form of strange beauty is floating along 
On the soft summer air, and the Future draws near, 
With a light on her young fiice, unshadowed and clear. 
Two garlands she bears in the arms that not )'et 
Have toiled 'neath the burden and heat of tlie day; 
Lo ! both are of Amaranth, fragrant and wet 
With the dew of remembrance, and fadeles'S alway. 
Oh ! well may we hush our vain babblings — and wait ! 
He who merits the crown, wears it sooner or late ! 
On the brow of the Present, the grave of the Past, 
The wreaths they have earned shall rest surely at last ' 



TIIK THREE SHIPS. 



137 



THE THREE SHIPS. 

Over the waters clear and dark 
Flew, like a startled bird, our bark. 

All the day long with steady sweep 
Seagulls followed us over the deep. 

Weird and strange were the silent shores, 
Rich with their wealth of buried ores; 

Mighty the forests, old and gray, 

With the secrets locked in their hearts away ; 

Semblance of castle and arch and shrine 
Towered aloft in the clear sunshine; 

And we watched for the warder, stern and grim, 
And the priest with his chanted prayer and hymn. 

Over that wonderful northern sea. 

As one who sails in a dream, sailed we-j^ 

Till, when the young moon soared on high. 
Nothing was round us but sea and sky. 

Far in the east the pale moon swung, — 
A crescent dim in the azure hung; 
I 2 * 



138 THE THREE SHIPS. 

But the sun lay low in the glowing west, 
With bars of purple across his breast. 

The skies were aflame with the sunset glow, 
The billows were all aflame below; 

The far horizon seemed the gate 

To some mystic world's enchanted state; 

And all the air was a luminous mist, 
Crimson and amber and amethyst. 

Then silently into that fiery sea — 
Into the heart of the mystery — 

Three ships went sailing, one by one. 
The fairest visions under the sun. 

Like the flame in the heart of a ruby set 
Were the sails that flew from each mast of jet ; 

While darkly against the burning sky 
Streamer and pennant floated high. 

Steadily, silently, on they pressed 
Into the glowing, reddening west ; 

Until, on the for horizon's fold, 

They slowly passed through its gate of gold. 

You think, perhaps, they were nothing more 
Than schooners laden with common ore? 

Wliere Care clasped hands with grimy Toil, 
And the decks were stained with earthly moil? 



THE THREE SHIPS. 

Oh, beautiful ships, who sailed that night 
Into the west from our yearning sight, 

Y\\\\ well I know that the freight ye bore 
Was laden not for an earthly shore ! 

To some far realm ye were sailing on, 
Where all we have lost shall yet be won ; 

Ye were bearing thither a world of dreams, 
Bright as that sunset's golden gleams; 

And hopes whose tremulous, rosy flush, 
Grew fairer still in the twilight hush. 

Ye were bearing hence to that mystic spliere 
Thoughts no mortal may utter here, — 

Songs that on earth may not be sung, — 
Words too holy for human tongue, — 

The golden deeds that we would have done, — 
The fadeless wreaths that we would have won'! 

And hence it was that our souls with you 
Traversed the measureless waste of blue. 

Till you passed under the sunset gate. 
And to us a voice said, softly, "Wait !" 



139 



I40 



THE GHOST. 



THE GHOST. 

Wandering on where the smiling river 

Winds through the fields to the steepled town ; 
Pausing now where the aspens quiver, 

Now where the hazel-nuts are brown ; 
Lingering under the solemn arches, 

Lifted against the far blue skies, 
Where the pines and the feathery larches 

Cross their boughs as they soaring rise; 

Loitering long where sudden glimmers 

Tell that the mill-wheels plash and play 
Under the bank, like sturdy swimmers. 

Tossing the surf and the silvery spray; 
Threading the path through the daisied meadow 

Down to the dell so dark and cool, 
Where in the hemlock's fragrant shadow 

Harebells nod by the drowsy pool ; 

In at the school-house windows peering, — 

Reading the names on the whitewashed wall; 
And in the shadowy stillness hearing 

Voices that now are silent all ; 
Then at last in the chancel olden 

Kneeling down with a wordless prayer, 
While the glow of a sunset golden 

Falls like a benediction there. 



"I A' TO THY HANDS." 

Out again where the twilight splendor 

Flushes the hi 11- tops ere it dies, — 
Watching the young stars, pure and tender, 

Opening softly their lustrous eyes; 
Wondering if in its wonted glory 

Von moon rises behind the pines, — 
If it repeats the same old story 

As with the olden light it shines ! 

Ah, my friend ! I have not been lonely 

Wandering thus through the livelong day; 
One revealed to my senses only 

Has been with me all the day I 
If I mused in the grassy hollow. 

Shook the nuts from the beechen tree. 
Or watched the flight of the skimming swallow, 

The ghost of my childhood walked with me ! 



141 



''INTO THY HANDS." 

Into thy hands, O Father ! Now at last, 

Weary with struggling and with long unrest, 

Vext by remembrances of conflicts past 
And by a host of present cares opprest, 

I come to thee and cry. Thy will be done ! 

Take thou the burden I have borne too long; 
Into thy hands, O mighty, loving One, 

My weakness gives its all, for thou art strong! 



142 DECEMBER 26, 1910. 

For life— for death. I cannot see the way; 

I blindly wander on to meet the night; 
The path grows steeper, and the dying day 

Soon with its shadows will shut out the light. 

Hold thou my hand, O Father ! I am tired 
As a young child that wearies of the road ; 

And the far heights towards which I once aspired, 
Have lost the glory with which erst they glowed. 

Take thou my life, and mould it to thy will; 

Into thy hands commit I all my way; 
Fain would I lift each cup that thou dost fill, 

Nor from its brim my pale lips ever stay. 

Take thou my life. I lay it at thy feet ; 

And in my death my sure support be thou ; 
So shall I sink to slumber calm and sweet. 

And wake at morn before thy face to bow ! 



DECEMBER 26, 1910. 

A BALLAD OF MAJOR ANDERSON. 

Come, children, leave your playing this dark and stormy 

night , 
Shut fast the rattling window-blinds, and make the fire 

burn bright; 
And hear an old man's story, while loud the fierce winds 

blow. 
Of gallant Major Anderson and fifty years ago. 



DECEMBER 26, 1910. lA-? 

I was a young man then, boys, but twenty-nine years 

old. 
And all my comrades knew me for a soldier brave and 

bold; 
My eye was bright, my step was firm, I measured six feet 

two, 
Anil I knew not what it was to shirk when there was work 

to do. 

^Vc were stationed at Fort Moultrie, in Charleston harbor, 

then, 
A brave l)antl, though a small one, of scarcely seventy 

men ; 
And day and night we waited for the coming of the foe, 
With noble Major Anderson, just fifty years ago. 

Were they French or English, ask you? Oh, neither, 

neither, child ! 
^Ve were at peace with other lands, and all the nations 

smiled 
On the stars and stripes, wherever they floated far and 

free, 
And all the foes we had to meet we found this side the sea. 

But even between brothers bitter feuds will sometimes 

rise. 
And 'twas the cloud of civil war that darkened in the 

skies; 
I have not time to tell you how the quarrel first began. 
Or how it grew, till o'er our land the strife like wildfire 

ran . 

I will not use hard words, my boys, for I am old and gray, 
And Fve learned it is an easy thing for the best to go 
astray ; 



144 DECEMBER 26, 1910. 

Some wrong there was on either part, I do not doubt at 

all; 
There are two sides to a quarrel — be it great or be it 

small ! 

But yet, when South Carolina laid her sacrilegious hand 
On the altar of a Union that belonged to all the land ; 
When she tore our glorious banner down and trailed it in 

the dust, 
Every patriot's heart and conscience bade him guard the 

sacred trust. 

You scarce believe me, children. Grief and doubt are in 

your eyes, 
Fixed steadily upon me in wonder and surprise; 
Don't forget to thank our Father, when to-night you kneel 

to pray, 
That an undivided people rule America to-day. 

We were stationed at Fort Moultrie, — but about a mile 

away. 
The battlements of Sumter stood proudly in the bay; 
'Twas by far the best position, as he could not help but 

know, 
Our gallant Major Anderson, just fifty years ago. 

Yes, 'twas just after Christmas, fifty years ago to-night; 
The sky was calm and cloudless, the moon was large and 

bright ; 
At six o'clock the drum beat to call us to parade. 
And not a man suspected the plan that had been laid. 

But the first thing a soldier learns is that he must obey, 
And that when an order's given he has not a word to say; 



DECEMBER 26, 1910. 14^ 

So when told to man the boats, not a question did we ask, 
But silently, yet eagerly, began our hurried task. 

We did a deal of work that night, though our numbers 

were but few; 
We had all our stores to carry, and our ammunition too ; 
And the guard-ship — 'twas the Nina — set to watch us in 

the bay. 
Never dreamed what we were doing, though 'twas almost 

light as day. 

We spiked the guns we left behind, and cut the flag-staff 

down, — 
From its top should float no colors if it might not hold our 

own, — 
Then we sailed away for Sumter as fast as we could go. 
With our good Major Anderson, just fifty years ago. 

I never can forget, my boys, how the next day, at noon. 
The drums beat and the band played a stirring martial 

tune. 
And silently we gathered round the flag-staff, strong and 

high. 
Forever pointing upward to God's temple in the sky. 

Our noble Major Anderson was good as he was brave. 
And he knew without His blessing no banner long could 

wave ; 
So he knelt, with head uncovered, while the chaplain read 

a prayer. 
And as the last amen was said, the flag rose high in air. 

Then our loud huzzas lang out, far and widely o'er the sea ! 
We shouted for the stars and stripes, the standard of the 
free ! 

13 



146 FROM BATON ROUGE. 

Every eye was fixed upon it, every heart beat warm and 

fast, 
As with eager lips we promised to defend it to the last ! 

'Twas a sight to be remembered, boys, — the chaplain with 
his book, 

Our leader humbly kneeling, with his calm, undaunted 
look; 

And the officers and men, crushing tears they would not 
shed, — 

And the blue sea all around us, and the blue sky over- 
head ! 

Now, go to bed, my children, the old man's story's told, — 
Stir up the fire before you go, 'tis bitter, bitter cold; 
And I'll tell you more to-morrow night, when loud the 

fierce winds blow. 
Of gallant Major Anderson and fifty years ago. 



FROM BATON ROUGE. 

From the fierce conflict and the deadly fray 
A patriot hero comes to us this day. 

Greet him with music and with loud acclaim, 
And let our hills re-echo with his name. 

Bring rarest flowers their rich perfume to shed, 
Like sweetest incense, round the warrior's head. 

Let heart and voice cry ''welcome," and a shout. 
Upon the summer air, ring gayly out, 



J-'KOM BAl^O.V ROUGE. 



147 



To hail the hero, who from fierce affray 
And deadly conflict comes to us this day. 

Alas ! alas ! for smiles ye give but tears, 
And wordless sorrow on each face appears. 

And for glad music, jubilant and clear, 
'J'he tolling bell, the muffled drum, we hear. 

Woe to us, soldier, loyal, tried, and brave. 
That we have naught to give thee but a grave. 

Woe that the wreath that should have decked thy brow, 
Can but be laid upon thy coffin now. 

WoQ that thou canst not hear us when we say, — 
"Hail to thee, brother, welcome home to day!" 

O God, we lift our waiting eyes to Thee, 
And sadly cry, how long must these things be? 

How long must noble blood be poured like rain, 
Hooding our land from mountain unto main? 

How long from desolated hearths must rise 
The smoke of life's most costly sacrifice? 

Our brothers languish upon beds of pain, — 
Father, O Father, have they bled in vain? 

Is it for naught that they have drunken up 
The very dregs of this most bitter cup? 

How long? how long? O God! our cause is just, 
And in Thee only do we put our trust. 



148 THE VERMONT VOLUNTEERS. 

As Thou didst guide the Israelites of old 

Through the Red Sea, and through the desert wold, 

Lead Thou our leaders, and our land shall be 
For evermore, the land where all are free ! 

^ if. if- -^ :!(. -^ 

Hail and farewell, — we whisper in one breath, 
As thus we meet thee, hand in hand with death ! 

God give thy ashes undisturbed repose 

Where drum-beat wakens neither friend nor foes; 

God take thy spirit to eternal rest, 

And, for Christ's sake, enroll thee with the blest ! 



THE VERMONT VOLUNTEERS. 
1863. 

Four years, four little years ago, through all our sunny 
land. 

Sat wives and mothers, calmly blessed, beside each house- 
hold band ; 

And still the bright days glided on, and quiet nights 
dropped down, 

Wrapping in one soft web of dreams, cot, hamlet, vale, 
and town. 

Our sturdy husbands held the plow, or cast the shining 

grain ; 
Our sons and brothers gayly toiled on hill-side and on 

plain ; 



THE VERMONT VOLUNTEERS. 



149 



At forge and anvil, mill and loom, in all the marts of 

trade, 
And where primeval forests throw a grand, eternal shade. 

They raised the marble from its bed, upon the mountain- 
side ; 

They joyed through wild and devious paths, the iron horse 
to guide ; 

And sonie of studious eye and brow, labored with tongue 
and pen. 

Breathing high words of lofty cheer, to bless their fellow- 
nien. 

But sometimes as we sat at ease, in that serenest air, 
\\'e wondered if brave hearts and bold, found fitting nur- 
ture there ; 
We wondered if our mountaineers were valiant as of old, — 
If "cloth of frieze" were still found matched, with cost- 
'liest "cloth of gold." 

And, haply, earnest souls, when thrilled by some quaint, 

olden story, 
The ages have brought dowai to us, haloed wdth solemn 

glory, 
Sighed for the grand, heroic days, they thought forever 

past, 
And deemed the present cold and tame, prosaic to the 

last. 

And cheeks of maidens flushed and paled, as deeply pon- 
dering o'er 
Some page of old romance, or tale of legendary lore, 



150 THE VERMONT VOLUNTEERS. 

They read of tilt and tournament, and fields of daring 

high, 
Where knights for ladies' love were proud, nobly to do or 

die. 

A bugle blast rang through the land, a war-cry loud and 

shrill ; 
Each mountain peak caught up the strain, hill sent it back 

to hill; 
"To arms! to arms ! ye stalwart men, for freedom and 

for God, 
And tread yourselves the glorious paths your noble sires 

once trod !" 

Ah ! were they false or craven then ? or lagged they by 

the way? 
We talk not now of Marathon, nor ''old Platea's day;" 
We speak not of Leonidas, nor of Thermopylse, 
Where Persian thousands poured their blood, a dark, en- 
crimsoned sea. 

Nor do we tell, with tremulous lip, how Spartan mothers 
bade 

Their sons go out to meet the foe, with strong hearts un- 
dismayed, 

And sternly told them to come back, "bearing their 
shields or on them," — 

Our boys went forth tvithout their shields, to bloody fields, 
and won them ! ; . 

Oh ! paled for us the golden light of all the old romances ! 
True heroism does not die, as age on age advances; 
We know the story of to-day has all the old-tim'=' splendor, 
And that men's hearts are bold and brave, as they are 
true and tender ! 



THE VERMONT VOLUNTEERS. 15 j 

That fearful charge at Lee's Mills, across the rushing river, 
Where they saw in lines of rifle-pits tlie foemen's bayonets 

quiver, 
While cannon thundered over them — the men at Balaklava, 
So famed in story and in song, did nothing any braver. 

At Bethel and Manassas, from Yorktown on, to where 
The swamjw of Chickahominy poured death upon the air; 
On the deadly field of Antietam and many a one beside, 
Our brave boys wrote their names in blood, — then cheered 
the flag and died. 

At Fredericksburg and Marye's Hill and Gettysburg they 

bore 
Their colors bravely in the front until the strife was o'er; 
At Baton Rouge brave Roberts fell, bleeding from many 

a wound. 
At Newbern noble Jarvis poured his life-blood on the 

ground. 

Ye tried, and true, and loyal ones, what words of mine 

can tell 
How in your country's inmost heart, your memories shall 

dwell ? 
The record of your glorious deeds shall live for evermore, 
Till Heaven and Earth shall pass away, and Time itself 

be o'er. 

And oh ! ye honored dead who lie in unmarked graves 

this day, 
O'er which no friend may ever weep, nor wife nor mother 

pray- 
Yet Earth shall hold in glad embrace the sacred, solemn 

trust, 
And God and all his angels watch over each soldier's dust. 



152 yi/^F 6, 1864. 



MAY 6, 1864. 

How beautiful was earth that day ! 

The far bkie sky had not a cloud ; 
The river rippled on its way, 

Singing sweet songs aloud. 

The delicate beauty of the spring 

Pervaded all the murmuring air; 
It touched with grace the meanest thing 
And made it very fair. 

The blithe birds darted to and fro, 

The bees were humming round the hive, 
So happy in that radiant glow ! 
So glad to be alive ! 

And I? My heart was calmly blest. 

I knew afar the war-cloud rolled 
Lurid and dark, in fierce unrest, 
Laden with woes untold. 

But on that day my fears were stilled ; 

The very air I breathed was joy; 
The rest and peace my soul that filled 
Had nothing of alloy. 

As round our humble cottage home 

I moved, on household tasks intent, 
Glad thoughts of days when he should come 
To bless me, with me went. 



M.-1V 6, 1 864. le^ 

Our little <j;\r\ came late from school fifl 
Laden with buds and blossoms sweet, 
That, nestling in the forest cool, 
Had thither lured her feet. 

I took the flower he loved the best, 

The Arbutus, — fairest child of May,— 
And with its perfume half Qppressed, 
Twined many a lovely spray 

About his picture on the wall ; 

His eyes were on me all the while. 
And when I had arranged them all 
I thought he seemed to smile. 

O Christ, be pitiful ! That hour 

Saw him fall bleeding on the sod ; 

And while I toyed with leaf and flower 

His soul went up to God ! 

For him one pang — and then a crown ; 

For him the laurels heroes wear; 
For him a name whose long renown 
Ages shall onward bear. 

For me the cross without the crown ; 

For me the drear and lonely life; 
O God ! Afy sun, not /i/s, went down 
On that red field of strife. 



154 



DRIFTED APART. 



DRIFTED APART. 

Down in the grave with you, my friend, 

All the day long my heart has been. 
Longing through its dark depths to send 

A voice that might reach the ear within; 
A voice that might tell thee all my grief. 

And my vain repinings and bitter woe, 
When I read the message sharp and brief, — 

"Fallen in battle, two weeks ago." 

We had been friends for many a day : 

Mind answered to mind, and soul to soul, 
And thought responded to thought alway. 

Quick as the needle to the pole. 
But time and distance and care and strife 

Wrought their work upon brain and heart, 
While on the eddying current of life 

Our boats drifted farther and farther apart. 

Swept o'er the land the fierce tumult of war; 

Dark was the air with dread portents of gloom; 
At the sound of the slogan hosts rushed from afar, 

To rescue their land from its threatening doom. 
Quickly exchanging the pen for the sword. 

Thou didst haste to the conflict with never a sigh ; 
'Mid the thunder of battle thy life-blood was poured, - 

Martyr and Patriot, so did'st thou die! 

Thou wert noble and good and true, 
Lofty of aim and firm of will. 



THE DRUMMER BOY'S BURIAL. 155 

Doing the work God gave thee to do, 
Yieldnig thine own to his purpose still. 

Never a braver soul than thine 

Heard God's voice in the battle-cry, — 

Never a tenderer heart than thine 

Fell where the pitiless death-shots fly. 

Maybe from thy home in the other sphere, 

Friend of my bright and beautiful past. 
The words I am uttering thou dost hear. 

And dost know I was true to thee e'en to the last! 
Perhaps thou didst know of my bitter grief, 

And my vain regrets and reproachful woe. 
When I read the message sharp and brief, — 

"Fallen in battle, two weeks ago." 



THE DRUMMER BOY'S BURIAL. 

All day long the storm of battle through the startled val- 
ley swept ; 

All night long the stars in heaven o'er the slain sad vigils 
kept. 

Oh, the ghastly, upturned faces, gleaming whitely through 

the night ! 
Oh, the heaps of mangled corses in that dim sepulchral 

light ! 

One by one the pale stars faded, and at length the morn- 
ing broke ; 

But not one of all the sleepers on that field of death 
awoke. 



156 THE DRUMMER BOY'S BURIAL. 

Slowly passed the golden hours of that long bright sum- 
mer day, 

And upon that field of carnage still the dead unburied 
lay; 

Lay there stark and cold, but pleading with a dumb, un- 
ceasing prayer. 
For a little dust to hide them from the staring sun and air. 

But the foemen held possession of that hard-won battle- 
plain, 
In unholy wrath denying even burial to our slain. 

Once again the night dropped round them — night so holy 

and so calm 
That the moonbeams hushed the spirit, like the sound of 

prayer or psalm. 

On a couch of trampled grasses, just apart from all the 

rest, 
Lay a fair young boy, with small hands meekly folded on 

his breast. 

Death had touched him very gently, and he lay as if in 

sleep ; 
Even his mother scarce had shuddered at that slumber, 

calm and deep. 

For a smile of wondrous sweetness lent a radiance to the 

face. 
And the hand of cunning sculptor could have added 

naught of grace 

To the marble limbs so perfect in their passionless repose, 
Robbed of all save matchless purity by hard, unpitying 
foes. 



THE DRUMMER BOY'S BURIAL. 



157 



And the broken drum beside him all his life's short story 

told ; 
How he did his duty bravely till the death-tide o'er him 

rolled. 

Midnight came with ebon garments and a diadem of stars, 
While right upward in the zenith hung the fiery planet 
Mars. 

Hark ! a sound of stealthy footsteps and of voices whis- 
pering low, — 

Was it nothing but the young leaves, or the brooklet's 
murmuring flow? 

Clinging closely to each other, striving never to look 

round 
As they passed with silent shudder the pale corses on the 

ground, 

Came two little maidens — sisters — with a light and hasty 

tread. 
And a look upon their faces, half of sorrow, half of dread. 

And they did not pause nor falter till, with throbbing 

hearts, they stood 
Where the Drummer-Boy was lying in that partial solitude. 

They had brought some simple garments from their ward- 
robe's scanty store, 

And two heavy iron shovels in their slender hands they 
bore. 

Then they quickly knelt beside him, crushing back the 

pitying tears, 
For they had no time for weeping, nor for any girlish 

fears. 

14 



158 THE DRUMMER BOY'S BURL4L. 

And they robed the icy body, while no glow of maiden 

shame 
Changed the pallor of their foreheads to a flush of lambent 

flame. 

For their saintly hearts yearned o'er it in that hour of 

sorest need, 
And they felt that Death was holy and it sanctified the 

deed. 

But they smiled and kissed each other when their new, 

strange task was o'er, 
And the form that lay before them its unwonted garments 

wore. 

Then with slow and weary labor a small grave they hol- 
lowed out, 

And they lined it with the withered grass and leaves that 
lay about. 

But the day was slowly breaking ere their holy work was 

done. 
And in crimson pomp the morning again heralded the sun. 

And then those little maidens — they were children of our 

foes — 
Laid the body of our Drummer-Boy to undisturbed repose. 



CHARLEY OF MA L VERA HILL. 



159 



CHARLEY OF MALVERN HILL. 

A WAR-WORN soldier, bronzed and seamed 

By weary march and battle stroke ; 
'Twas thus, while leaning on his crutcli, 
The wounded veteran spoke, — 

"The blue-eyed boy of Malvern Hill! 

A hero every inch was he. 
Though scarcely larger than the child 
You hold, sir, on your knee. 

'* Some mother's darling! On that field 

He seemed so strangely out of place, 
With his pure brow, his shining hair, 
His sweet, unconscious grace. 

"But not a bearded warrior there 

Watched with a more undaunted eye 
The blackness of the battle-cloud. 

As the fierce storm rose high. 

" That morn — ah ! what a morn was that ! — 

We thought to send him to the rear; 
We loved the lad — and love, you know, 
Is near akin to fear. 

'•'We knew that many a gallant soul 
Must pass away in one long sigh. 
Ere nightfall. On that bloody field, 
'Twas not for boys to die. 



i6o CHARLEY OF MALVERN HLLL. 

"But he — could you have seen him then, 

As, with his bhie eyes full of fire. 
He poured forth tears and pleadings, half 
Of shame and half of ire ! 

" 'Oh ! do not bid me go !' he cried ; 

' I love yon flag as well as you ! 
I did not join your ranks to run 
When there is work to do ! 

" 'I did not come to beat my drum 

Only upon some gala day.' 
The colonel shook his head, but said, 
'Well, Charley, you may stay.' 

"Ah! then his tears were quickly dried ^ 

A few glad words he strove to say; 
But there was little time to talk, 
And hardly time to pray. 

"For bitter, bitter was the strife 

That raged that day on Malvern Hill; 
Blue coats and gray in great heaps lay. 
Ere that wild storm grew still. 

"At length we charged. My very heart 
Sank down within me, cold and dumb, 
When to the front, and far ahead, 

Rushed Charley with his drum! 

"Above the cannon's thundering boom, 
The din and shriek of shot and shell. 
We heard its clear peal rolling out 
Right gallantly and well. 



SUP PLICA AILS. i6i 

"A moment's awful waiting! Then 
There came a sullen, angry roar, — 
O God ! An empty void remained 
Where Charley stood before. 

"What did we then? With souls on fire 

We swept upon the advancing foe, 
And bade good angels guard the dust 

O'er which no tears might flow!" 



SUPPLICAMUS. 

O LAGGARD Sun ! make haste to wake 

From her long trance the slumbering earth; 

Make haste this icy spell to break. 
That she may give new glories birth ! 

O April rain ! so soft, so warm, 

Bounteous in blessing, rich in gifts, 

Drop tenderly upon her form. 

And bathe the forehead she uplifts. 

O springing grass I make haste to run 
With swift feet o'er the meadows bare; 

O'er hill and dale, through forests dun, 
And where the wandering brooklets are I 

O sweet wild flowers ! the darksome mould 
Hasten with subtle strength to rift; 

Serene in beauty, meek yet bold, 
Your fair brows to the sunlight lift! 
14* 



1 6 2 ^ UP PL ICA MUS. 

O haste ye all ! for far away 
In lonely beds our heroes sleep, 

O'er which no wife may ever pray, 
Nor child nor mother ever weep. 

No quaintly carved memorial stone 
May tell us that their ashes lie 

Where southern pines make solemn moan, 
And wailing winds give sad reply. 

But deep in dreary, lonesome shades, 
On many a barren, sandy plain, 

By rocky pass, in tangled glades, 
And by the rolling, restless main ; 

By rushing stream, by silent lake, 
Uncoffined in their lowly graves, 

Until the earth's last morn shall break. 
Must sleep our unforgotten braves ! 

O sun ! O rain ! O gentle dew ! 

O fresh young grass, and opening flowers! 
With yearning hearts we leave to you 

The holy task that should be ours ! 

Light up the darkling forest's gloom ; 

Cover the bare, unsightly clay 
With tenderest verdure, with the bloom, 

The beauty and perfume of May! 

O sweet blue violets ! softly creep 
Beside the slumbering warrior's bed ; 

O roses ! let your red hearts leap 
For joy o'er it your sweets to shed ; 



THE LAST OF SIX. 

O liumble mosses ! such as make 

New England's woods and pastures fair, 

Over each mound, for Love's sweet sake, 
Spread your soft folds with tender care. 

Dear Nature, to your loving breast 

Clasp our dead heroes ! In your arms 

Sweet be their sleep, serene their rest, 
Unmoved by Battle's loud alarms ! 



163 



THE LAST OF SIX. 

(]oME in; you are welcome, neighbor; all day I've been 

alone, 
And heard the wailing, wintry wind sweep by with bitter 

moan ; 
And to-night beside my lonely fire, I mutely wonder why 
I, who once wept as others weep, sit here with tearless 

eye. 

To-day this letter came to me. At first I could not 

brook 
LTpon the unfamiliar lines by strangers penned, to look; 
The dread of evil tidings shook my soul with wild 

alarm, — 
But Harry's in the hospital, and has only lost an arm. 

He is the last — the last of six brave boys as e'er were 

seen ! 
How short, to memory's vision, seem the years that lie 

between 



1 64 THE LAST OF SIX. 

This hour and those most blessed ones, when round this 

hearth's bright blaze 
They charmed their mother's heart and eye with all their 

pretty ways ! 

My William was the eldest son, and he was first to go. 
It did not at all surprise me, for I knew it would be so, 
From that fearful Aj^ril Sunday when the news from 

Sumter came, 
And his lips grew white as ashes, while his eyes were all 

aflame. 

He sprang to join the three months' men. I could not 

say him nay, 
Though my heart stood still within me when I saw him 

march away; 
At the corner of the street he smiled, and waved the flag 

he bore ; — 
I never saw him smile again — he was slain at Baltimore. 

They sent his body back to me, and as we stood around 
His grave, beside his father's, in yonder burial-ground, 
John laid his hand upon my arm and whispered, " Mother 

dear, 
I have Willy's work and mine to do. I cannot loiter 

here." 

I turned and looked at Paul, for he and John were twins, 

you know, 
Born on a happy Christmas, four-and-twenty years ago ; 
I looked upon them both, while my tears fell down like 

rain, 
Yox I knew what one had spoken, had been spoken by the 

twain. 



THE LAST OF SIX. 165 

In a month or more they left me, — the merry, handsome 

boys, 
Who had kept the old house ringing with their laughter, 

fun, and noise. 
Then James came home to mind the farm; my younger 

sons were still 
Mere children, at their lessons in the school-house on the 

hill. 

days of weary waiting ! O days of doubt and dread ! 

1 feared to read the papers, or to see the lists of dead ; 
But when full many a battle-storm had left them both 

unharmed, 
I taught my foolish heart to think the double lives were 
charmed. 

Their colonel since has told me that no braver boys than 

they 
Ever rallied round the colors, in the thickest of the fray; 
Upon the wall behind you their swords are hanging 

still, — 
For John was killed at Fair Oaks, and Paul at Malvern 

Hill. 

Then came the dark days, darker than any known before ; 

There was another call for men, — "three hundred thou- 
sand more ;" 

I saw the cloud on Jamie's brow grow deeper day by day. 

I shrank before the impending blow, and scarce had 
strength to pray. 

And yet at last I bade him go, while on my cheek and 

brow 
His loving tears and kisses fell; I feel them even now. 



1 66 THE LAST OF SIX. 

Though the eyes that shed the tears, and the lips so warm 

on mine 
Are hidden under southern sands, beneath a blasted pine ! 

He did not die 'mid battle-smoke, but for a weary year 

He languished in close prison walls, a prey to hope and 
fear; 

I dare not trust myself to think of the fruitless pangs he 
bore. 

My brain grows wild when in my dreams I count his suf- 
ferings o'er. 

Only two left ! I thought the worst was surely over then ; 

But lo ! at once my school-boy sons sprang up before 
me — men ! 

They heard their brothers' martyr blood call from the hal- 
lowed ground ; 

A loud, imperious summons that all other voices drowned. 

I did not say a single word. My very heart seemed dead. 
What could I do but take the cup, and bow my weary 

head 
To drink the bitter draught again? I dared not hold 

them back; 
I would as soon have tried to check the whirlwind on its 

track. 

You know the rest. At Cedar Creek my Frederick bravely 

fell; 
They say his young arm did its work right nobly and 

right well ; 
His comrades breathe the hero's name with mingled love 

and pride; 
I miss the gentle blue-eyed boy, who frolicked at my side. 



A MEMORY. lOj 

For me, I ne'er shall weep again. I think my heart is 

dead, 
I, who could weep for lighter griefs, have now no tears to 

shed. 
But read this letter, neighbor. There is nothing to alarm. 
For Harry's in the hosjjital, and has only lost an arm! 



A MEMORY. 



Under the pine-trees, dark and still, 
Standing like sentinels on the hill, 
^^d^ere we walked in the long ago. 
Falls, as of old, the sunset glow. 

Tinging the mossbank, till it seems 
Fitting couch for fairy dreams; 
Cloth of gold its drapery rare, 
With velvet meet for a queen to wear. 

Still does the river roll between 
Flowery banks and meadows green ; 
Still do the mountains and the plain 
All of their pomp and glow retain. 

But thou and I ? Ah! years have flown, 
Oft have the summer roses blown, 
Oft have the roses died since we — 
Mere boy and girl beneath this tree — 

Watched while the daylight softly crept 
Up from the vale where the waters slept, 



i68 OUR FLAGS AT THE CAPITOL. 

Till the high mountain peaks grew dim, 
And yon star sang us a vesper hymn. 

I am older, and thou art — dead ! 

In a soldier's grave low lies thy head; 

They who laid it gently down. 

Saw it crowned with a martyr's crown ; 

Saw the palm in hands at rest, 
Folded o'er a blood-stained breast. 
Twice have the wild birds come and gone. 
Since that crown and palm were won ! 



OUR FLAGS AT THE CAPITOL. 

Remove them not ! Above our fallen braves 
Nature not yet her perfect work hath wrought ; 

Scarce has the turf grown green upon their graves, 
The martyr graves for whose embrace they fought. 

The wounds of our long conflict are not healed ; 

Our land's fair face is seamed with many a scar; 
And woeful sights, on many a battle-field. 

Show ghastly grim beneath the evening star. 

Still does the sad Earth tremble with affright. 
Lest she the tread of armed hosts should feel 

Once more upon her bosom. Still the Night 

Hears, in wild dreams, the cannon's thundering peal. 

Still do the black-robed mothers come and go ; 
Still do lone wives by dreary hearthstones weep; 



OUR FLAGS AT THE CAPITOL. 169 

Still does a Nation, in her pride and woe, 
For her dead sons a mournful vigil keep. 

Ah, then, awhile delay! Remove ye not 

These drooping banners from their place on high ; 

They make of each proud hall a hallowed spot, 
AVhere Truth must dwell and Freedom cannot die. 

Now slowly waving in this tranquil air. 

What wondrous eloquence is in their speech ! 

No prophet 'silver tongued,' no poet rare. 

Even in dreams may hope such heights to reach. 

They tell of Life that calmly looked on Death, — 
Of peerless valor and of trust sublime, — 

Of costly sacrifice, of holiest faith, 

Of lofty hopes that ended not with Time. 

Oh ! each worn fold is hallowed ! set apart 

To minister unto us in our needs, — 
To bear henceforth to many a fainting heart. 

The cordial wine of noble thoughts and deeds. 

Then leave them yet awhile where, day by day. 
The lessons that they teach, your souls may learn ; 

So shall ye labor for the Right alway. 
And for its faithful service ever yearn. 

Now may God bless our land for evermore ! 

And from all strife and turmoil grant surcease ; 
While from the mountains to the farthest shore 

Accordant voices softly whisper — Peace ! 

15 



lyo 1865. 



1865. 

O DARKEST Year ! O brightest Year ! 

O changeful Year of joy and woe, 
To-day we stand beside thy bier, 
Still loth to let thee go ! 

We look upon thy brow, and say, 

"How old he is, — how old and worn !" 
Has but a twelvemonth passed away 
Since thou wert newly born? 

So long it seems since on the air 

The joy-bells rang to hail thy birth, — • 
And pale lips strove to call thee fair. 
And sing the songs of mirth ! 

For dark the heavens that o'er thee hung; 
By stormy winds thy couch was rocked ; 
Thy cradle hymn the Furies sung, 

While sneering Demons mocked ! 

We held our very breath for dread ; 

We moved 'mid clouds, that, like a pall, 
Darkened the blue sky overhead, 
And night hung over all. 

But thou wert better than our fears, 

And bade our land's long anguish cease; 
And gave us, O thou Year of years. 
The costly pearl of Peace ! 



1865. 1 71 

So dearly bought ! By precious blood 
Of patriot heroes, — sire and son, — 
And that of him, the pure and good. 
Our wearied, martyred One ; 

Who bore for us the heavy load, — 

The cross-our hands upon him laid ; 
Who trod for us the toilsome road 
Meekly, yet undismayed ! 

And for that gift — although thy graves 
Lie thick beneath December's snow, 
Though every hamlet mourns its braves, 
And bears its weight of woe — 

We bless thee ! Yet, O bounteous year, 

For more than Peace we thank thee now, 
As bending o'er thine honored bier, 
We crown thy pallid brow ! 

We bless thee, though we scarcely dare 

Give to our new-born joy a tongue ; 
O mighty Year, upon the air 

Thy voice triumphant rung, 

Even in death ! and at the sound. 

From myriad limbs the fetters fell 
Into the dim and vast profound, 

While tolled thy passing bell ! 

Farewell, farewell, thou storied Year ! 

Thou wondrous Year of joy and gloom ! 
With grateful hearts we crown thee, ere 
We lay thee in thy tomb ! 



172 



WAITING FOR LETTERS. 



WAITING FOR LETTERS. 

Counting the minutes all the day long, 

Minutes that creep with the pace of a snail ; 
Deaf to the Bobolink's jubilant song, 

Deaf to the Whip-po-wil's pitiful wail ! 
Out in the garden red roses are blowing 
Down by the hedgerow are violets growing, 
Daisies their dainty white blossoms are showing. 
But the girl's heart bitter anguish is knowing. 

Striving to work, for there's work to be done, — 

Hands must be busy though hearts bleed and break, 
Lifting up tear-laden eyes to the sun. 

Ah ! the long day will not speed for her sake ; 
How the clock ticks on, unresting, unhasting; 
Never a single beat staying or wasting, 
Steady as fate, though our souls may be draining 
Cups where the bitter alone is remaining ! 

But the day wanes, as the longest day will ; 

Slowly the golden light fades from the west. 
All the green valleys lie breathless and still. 

Birds cease their trilling and winds are at rest. 
Hark ! A low sound as of far-away thunder ! 
'Tis the rush of the train as it sweeps along under 
The crests of the mountains that, parting asunder, 
Seem to shrink back from this demon-eyed wonder ! 

Ah, how her pulses throb ! Silent and pale 
Now stands she waiting — the mail has come in ! 



IDLE WORDS. I-- 

Waiting for letters. But watching must fail, 

And hope dream in vain of the bliss that has been. 
Down where the southern pines sigh in the gloaming, 
Still lie her lover's feet, weary of roaming ; 
Never again shall the heart of the maiden 
Hail his white missives with love overladen! 



IDLE WORDS. 

I. 

Once I said, 
Seeing two soft, starry eyes 
Darkly bright as midnight skies, — 
Eyes prophetic of the power 
Sure to be thy woman's dower. 
When the years should crown thee queen 
Of the realm as yet unseen, — 
" Some time, sweet, those eyes shall make 
Lovers mad for their sweet sake ! ' ' 



Once I said, 
Seeing tresses, golden-brown. 
In a bright shower falling down 
Over neck and bosom fair 
As yon sculptured angel's are, — 
Odorous tresses drooping low 
O'er a forehead pure as snow, — 
"Some time, sweet, in thy soft hair 
Love shall set a shining snare !" 
IS* 



174 



INCOMPLE TENESS. 

III. 
Once I said, 
Seeing lips whose crimson hue 
Mocked the roses wet with dew, — 
Warm, sweet lips, whose breath was balm,- 
Pure, proud lips, serenely calm, — 
Tender lips, whose smiling grace 
Lit with splendor all the face, — 
"Sweet, for kiss of thine some day 
Men will barter souls away!" 

IV. 

Idly said ! 
God hath taken care of all 
Joy or pain that might befall ! 
Lover's lip shall never thrill 
At thy kisses, soft and still ; 
Lover's heart shall never break 
In sore anguish for thy sake; 
Lover's soul for thee shall know 
Nor love's rapture, nor its woe ; — 

All is said ! 



INCOMPLETENESS. 

The noon is past — and far off I hear 
The feet of the twilight drawing near ! 
O hours that glide so swift away ! 
O golden hours that will not stay ! — 
Ye are slipping away from me one by one, 
And my poor day's work is scarce begun ! 



ns 



INCOMPLETENESS. 

All, me ! how I dreamed in the long ago, 
When the sky was red with the morn's first glow 
When the dew still lay on the flowers of spring, 
And the sweet May roses were opening ; — 
When the bluebirds sang and I scarce could see 
The robin's nest in the leafy tree! 

I dreamed such dreams of the far To Be 
And of all it held in its hands for me; 
I dreamed of the songs that were yet unsung 
Till my brain with their wondrous music rung, 
And my young heart burned with prophetic fire 
As I swept the chords of a mystic lyre. 

And oft when the star-crowned midnight came 
With her ebon locks and her eye of flame, 
Dim phantoms trooped to my silent room 
Trailing their robes through its ghostly gloom. 
' ' We are but shadows, ' ' they seemed to say, 
"Give us life and breath ere we fade away!" 

Alas ! Alas 1 They are still unsung, 
Those songs that with mystic music rung ; 
And the visions that haunted my silent room, 
Pleading for life in its dusky gloom, 
Those shadowy children of heart and brain, 
Unborn, unshriven, must aye remain! 



For Life laid on me its stern commands 

And bound me fast in its iron bands; 

It touched my lip with a finger chill. 

And the voice of its singing was hushed and still; 

Or rose at times in a changeful strain, 

Born half of joy and half of pain ! 



I 7 6 INCOMPLE TEN ESS. 

The noon is past, and far off I hear 
The feet of the twilight drawing near. 
Master ! what wilt thou say to me 
When my half-done work I show to thee? 
When my unfinished task I bring, 
Can I hope for word of welcoming ? 

Wilt thou smile or frown when, bending low, 
I cry, — "It is all I have to show — 
This incompleteness?" In that hour, 
O Christ ! remembering still thy dower 
Of human pain and weakness, say, 
"I own his work who would obey !" 



IN MEMORIAM. 



( «77 



COMING HOME. 

When the winter winds were loud, 
And Earth slept in snowy shroud, 
Oft our darling wrote to us, 
And the words ran ever thus, — 
' ' I am coming in the Spring ! 
With the Mayflower's blossoming. 
With the young leaves on the tree, 
O my dear ones, look for me!" 

And she came. One dreary day. 
When the skies were dull and gray, 
Softly through the open door 
Our beloved came once more. 
Came with folded hands that lay 
Very quietly alway, — 
Came with heavy-lidded eyes. 
Lifted not in glad surprise. 

Not a single word she spoke ; 
Laugh nor sigh her silence broke 
As across the quiet room, 
Darkening in the twilight gloom. 
On she passed in stillest guise, 
Calm as saint in Paradise, 
To the^pot where — woe betide! — 
Four years since she stood a bride. 



( 179) 



l8o JN' MEMORIAM. 

Then, you think, we sprang to greet her, — 
Sprang with outstretched hands, to meet her; 
Clasped her in our arms once more, 
As in happy days of yore; 
Poured warm kisses on her cheek, 
Passive lips and forehead meek, 
rill the barrier melted down 
That had thus between us grown. 

Ah, no ! — Darling, did you know 
When we bent above you so? 
When our tears fell down like rain, 
And our hearts were wild with pain? 
Did you pity us that day. 
Even as holy angels may 
Pity mortals here below. 
While they wonder at their woe? 

Who can tell us? Word nor sign 
Came from those pale lips of thine; 
Loving heart and yearning breast 
Lay in coldest, calmest rest. 
Is thy Heaven so very fair 
That thou dost forget us there? 
Speak, beloved ! Woe is me 
That in vain I call on thee ! 

Some time — but not yet — I know 
Time will check the bitter flow 
Of our tears. But nevermore 
Will Earth wear the smile she wore, 
Wear the golden glow that flung 
Light the dreariest paths among, 
Ere that one small grave was made 
Underneath the elm-tree's shade. 



HIDDEN AWAY. 1 8 1 



HIDDEN AWAY. 

Hidden away beneath the sod ! 

O my darling, can this be true? 
In the pleasant paths your feet have trod 

Must I look in vain, henceforth, for you? 
Will the summers come, and the summers go ? 

Will Earth rejoice in her robes of green ? 
Will roses blow, while thy cheek's young glow 

And thine eyes' soft smiling ne'er are seen? 

Hidden away three months ago ! 

Only three months ! but how long it seems 
Since that dreary day when the clouds hung low. 

And the wild rains flooded the swollen streams! 
It was meet that the sombre skies should weep. 

And the hills that you loved be black as night. 
When the dreamless sleep of the grave so deep. 

Wrapped you away from our yearning sight ! 

I know that Earth is as fair to-day, 

As fresh and fair as she was last June, 
When the wind in the maple boughs alway 

Seemed to murmur a pleasant tune ; 
The bending skies are as blue, I trow, 

The young leaves dance in their merry glee. 
The stars still glow, and the bright streams flow,-- 

What have we lost then? — Only thee! 

Only our best and our fairest, laid 
Out of our sight beneath the sod ! 
i6 



IN MEMORIAM. 

Only a voice whose music made 

Shorter the weary ways we trod ! 
But with warmth and light and odorous bloom 

The beautiful earth is glad and gay, 
Though down in the gloom of the shadowy tomb 

Thy form, my beloved, lies hidden away ! 



WAKENING EARLY. 

In loving jest you wrote, — "Ah, me ! 
My babe's blue eyes are fair to see; 
And sweet his cooing love-notes be 
That waken me too early!" 

Oh! would to God, beloved, to-day 
That merry shout or gleeful play 
Might drive your heavy sleep away, 
And bid you waken early ! 

But vain are all our prayers and cries; 
From your low bed you will not rise ; 
No kisses falling on your eyes. 

Can waken you right early. 

Bright are the skies above your bed. 
And through the elm boughs overhead 
Are golden simbeams softly shed. 

That wake you late nor early. 

Beside you through these summer days 
The murmuring fountain, as it plays, 



NELLIE'S MOTHER. 183 

Fills the soft air with diamond sprays, 
But does not wake you early ! 

We bring the flowers you loved so well, 
The pure white rose and lily bell ; 
Their sweets break not this fearful spell ; 
They do not wake you early ! 

We sing your songs; we pause to hear 
Your birdlike voice rise full and clear; 
Ah! dull and heavy is your ear; 
We cannot wake you early. 

You will not wake? Then may your sleep, 
If it be long, be calm and deep ; 
Thank God, the eyes forget to weep 
That do not waken early ! 



NELLIE'S MOTHER. 

In the cool and pleasant shade 
By the drooping elm boughs made. 
Where the fountain sings its song. 
Tinkling, tinkling, all day long ; 
Where the blithe birds come and go, 
Murmuring love-notes sweet and low, 
Wrapped in silence calm and deep 
Nellie's mother lies asleep. 

'Twas a dreary April day; 

Dark the skies were, cold and gray. 



IN MEMORIAM. 

When we laid her down to rest, 
With her pale hands on her breast. 
Sullenly the rain-drops fell, 
And each drop was like a knell; 
Even nature seemed to weep 
O'er our darling's dreamless sleep ! 

She was young and very fair; 

Soft red lips, and waving hair, 

Earnest eyes of darkest blue, 

Face from which the soul shone through, 

Guileless heart, that never beat 

Save to impulse pure and sweet, — 

Ah! we put them all away 

Out of sight, that dreary day! 

But God sent his healing balm. 
And our anguished hearts grew calm; 
Over all graves, in his good time 
Grasses will grow and mosses climb; 
And upon hers the turf was green, 
While violets smiled with eyes serene, 
And o'er our dear one's lovely head 
White roses joyed their sweets to shed. 

And often when the day was new, 
A fair-haired child, with eyes as blue 
As those that slept beneath the sod, 
About the green grave lightly trod. 
Over the fresh and tender grass 
Her tiny hand would gently pass, 
Brushing each withered leaf away, 
And gathering in each wandering spray. 



so LONG ! 

"Mamma is up in heaven, I know," 
The sweet young voice would whisper low, 
"But yet, I think, 'twill please her there, 
To see I keep her grave with care." 
And so, with happy zeal, she wrought, 
Her face aglow with kindling thought, — 
Holding communion, it may be, 
With one our dim eyes could not see. 



iss 



so LONG! 



It is not yet a year since thou. 
With calmest mien and placid brow, 
Didst seek the rest that knows no dreams,— 
Yet, ah ! beloved, so long it seems, — 
So long it seems ! 

The fresh young grass was springing when 
We hid thee from the eyes of men ; 
And th' arbutus' pallid bloom 
Amid the darkness of thy tomb 
Shed faint perfume ! 

And now above thy lowly grave 
The white snows drift, the wild winds rave 
For the first time. Not once the year 
Has rounded to a perfect sphere 
Since thou wert here ! 
i6* 



l86 IN ME MORI AM. 

Not yet a year ! O weary days, 
I count ye o'er in sad amaze ! 
While still amid the careless throng, 
My heart repeats its woeful song, 
So long, so long ! 



BLEST. 



Sinking to thine eternal rest, 
O dying Year ! I call thee blest ; 
Blest as no coming year may be 
This side of vast Eternity ! 

Thy cheek is pale, thy brow is worn ; 
Thine arms are weary, that have borne 
The heaviest burdens ever laid 
On any, since the world was made. 

But thou didst know her, whom to-day 
My fond heart mourns, and must alway; 
And she — our best one, called thee dear, 
Hailing witl'- joy the glad New Year ! 

Her blue eyes smiled upon thy birth; 
Her voice, tlie sweetest on the earth, 
Sang gladsome carols, joyous lays, 
And thrilling anthems in thy praise. 

Thou didst behold her, fair and good ; 
The perfect flower of womanhood ; 



FOUR YEARS. 

Simple and pure in tliought and deed, 
Yet strong in every hour of need. 

Ah ! other years shall come and go, 
Bidding the sweet June roses blow ; 
But never on their yearning eyes. 
Shall her fair presence once arise ! 

The Spring shall miss her, and the long, 
Bright Summer days hear not her song ; 
And hoary Winter, draped in snow, 
Finding her not, shall haste to go ! 

Therefore, Old Year, I call thee blest, 
Thus sinking to eternal rest ; 
Blest as no other Year may be 
This side of vast Eternity ! 



187 



FOUR YEARS. 

Do they measure time where thou art, 

O my beloved ? 
Does the thought fill thy heart 

As mine, beloved. 
That four years ago to-night, 
Thou didst pass beyond our sight, 
Out upon the unknown sea 
Where we could not follow thee? 

Dost thou remember it, 
O my beloved? 



1 88 IN' ME MORI AM. 

Does there a memory flit 

O'er thee, beloved, 
Of the hour when on thy lips, 
And thy blue eyes' sad eclipse, 
Love's last tearful kiss was pressed 
Ere you sank to dreamless rest ? 

Couldst thou but answer me 

Just once, beloved. 
Solving this mystery, 

O my beloved ! 
What to thee have been the years, 
Marked for us by bitter tears? 
Hast thou grown beyond our reach, 
Learning what the angels teach? 



THEN AND NOW. 

When last these trembling blossoms swung, 
Bright pendants on the bending spray. 

Like tiny bells by fairies rung 
\\\ tinkling murmurs all the day; 

We bent above them, thou and I, 
Entranced the lovely things to view, 

That shamed the ruby's burning dye, 
And mocked the oriole's brilliant hue. 

How fair thou wert that happy morn ! 

I turned to gaze upon thy face. 
Where beauty, of the spirit born, 

Looked outward in serenest grace; 



REMEMBRANCE. 189 

Then broke a lovely crimson spray, 
With waxen leaves of darkest green, 

And soon, a glowing wreath, it lay 
Thy folds of soft brown hair between. 

And then I kissed thee. Ah, my love ! 

Would that our past might live again ! 
For thou hast flown to realms above, 

While I am standing here, as then. 

But now from these same flowers I twine 

A simple wreath to deck thy grave. 
Woe that a form so dear as thine 

Love had no power to shield or save ! 



REMEMBRANCE. 

Beloved, if thine earnest eyes 
So deeply blue, so darkly bright, 

Look downward from the azure skies 
That hide thee from my yearning sight ; 

Think not because my days go on 
Just as they did when thou wert here, 

Sometimes in shade, sometimes in sun, 
From month to month, from year to year. 

That I forget thee ! Fresh and green 
Over each grave the grass will grow 

In God's good time, and all unseen 
The violets take deep root below. 



IQO 



IN MEMORIAM. 

But yet the grave itself remains 

Beneath the verdure and the bloom; 

And kindly Nature's loving pains 
Can only hide the ghastly tomb. 

I work, I read, I sing, I smile, 

I train my vines and tend my flowers, 

But under-thoughts of thee the while 
Haunt me through all the passing hours 

And still my spirit yearns for thee 
As it must yearn till life is past, 

Till I have crossed Death's heaving sea. 
And meet thy clasping hand at last. 



A VISION. 



A STRANGE, wild vision of the night ! 
I thought I stood beside her bed. 
O'er whom such bitter tears I shed 

When she was buried from my sight — ■ 
Ah ! long ago ! 

Won from the cruel grave's embrace 
My darling lay before me there ; 
But o'er the features once so fair, 

And o'er the limbs' unconscious grace, 
A white pall swept. 

Then a calm voice, whose low command 
Thrilled me with strange, resistless power. 
Swayed me as soft winds sway a flower. 



A VISION. 

Said, solemnly, ''Reach forth thine hand, — 
Unveil the face!" 



I shrank and trembled. From my lips 
A cry went upward. Could I bear 
To see Decay's dread impress there? 

Or view her beauty's sad eclipse 
And yet live on? 

The deep, low voice repeated, — "Look !" 
Oh, God ! I tore the veil away, 
But hid my sad eyes from the day 

With clasping hand. I could not brook 
Death's work to see. 

" Look and fear not !" I looked, and lo ! 

I saw my darling as of old; 

Unchanged the brown hair's lustrous fold, 
Unchanged the red lip's crimson glow. 
The brow's pure snow ! 

And while I gazed as in a dream 

The blue eyes opened, large and soft. 
Filled with the tender light that oft 

Had thrilled me with its wondrous gleam 
In days gone by. 

She smiled, and softly breathed my name; 

I clasped her to my throbbing breast ; 

Her fresh young lips to mine were pressed, 
Her changing color went and came 
Like rosy flame ! 



191 



192 



IN ME MORI AM. 



"This is a miracle !" I cried, — 

"My love, my darling! in the grave, 
From which no earthly arm could save, 

Long months ago — ah ! woe betide ! — 
We laid thee down ! ' ' 

"Yet still, beloved, I am here," 
Said the sweet lips in calm reply; 
Then, ere a moment flitted by. 

My arms, outstretched in love and fear. 
Touched empty air ! 

Afar yet near! Unseen, yet still 
A living presence by my side. 
The gulf between us is not wide; 

My own lost love ! I trust thee till 
We meet once more ! 



THE END. 



